
“Fracking” (Hydraulic Fracturing) is a controversial process in Europe. By producing rock cracks, it allows the extraction of oil and gas from unconventional deposits.
Scientists from KIT, in cooperation with the National Center for Atmospheric Research and the University of Colorado, conducted field measurements to detect methane emissions from fracking in spring 2015.
In the model test, one of the two available gas cells can additionally be brought into the beam. One cell contains carbon dioxide (CO2), the other methane (CH4). The quantities of the gases are tuned in such a way that the attenuation is approximately the same as in the atmospheric observation against the sun. By inserting the cell, the characteristic signatures of carbon dioxide (or methane) visible in solar measurement are generated.