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That the earth is rotating at 1000 mph and

that Britain and Ireland sit on the eastern

seaboard of the Atlantic bathed in the effect

of the warm north atlantic drift - our climate

would be more like that of those countries

far to the north of us which are much colder.

The ice melt from the Arctic and Greenland is however pushing

more and more cold water further south every year and diverting

that atlantic drift effect and taking the jet streams with it.

 

 

 

As the temperature gradient between these two systems came into

equilibrium over that last 35 days or so it would appear that a new

type of north-west south-east divide had been locked into Britain

and Ireland such that the diverse weather conditions prevailing

during the course of yesterday - can best be described by the

photographs which the Daily Mail has appended to their article

about yet another flash flood which the inhabitants of Todmorton

in Yorkshire had to endure during the day - whilst Linnie and I

enjoyed a glorious day of sunshine, relaxing on deck chairs eating

the best plaice and chips ever, on the beach at Western Super Mare.

 

 

The absolute amount of water on earth is fixed - until another

comet might bring some more - but the increased amount of water

in the oceans which has resulted from ice melt and caused the water

level of the oceans to rise - has to be re-distributed by the water

cycle and nature has to find ways to do this - as was demonstrated

last year on the north american eastern seaboard and this last

month or so because of our own particular weather system

equilibrium.

 

Meanwhile the weather conditions over other european countries

adjacent to and associated with "the divide" - are predicted to

become more unusual


NO RESPECT for your environment - NO RESPECT for YOURSELF

 

 

AS many of the quantum physicists of the day have stated - both

individually and collectively - "OUR species concept of time is merely

an illusion - the past, the present and the future are ALL just different

perspectives of the same reality" - which still begs the question

 

"HOW DO - "WE LIVE" in THIS PARTICULAR MOMENT ?"

 

Satellite imaging reveals increased proportion of population expose...

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Views: 195

Comment by Michael Grove on August 24, 2013 at 9:02

 

Published on Aug 19, 2013

An amateur astronomer in the north of Scotland has captured a
rare form of cloud and the northern lights on film at the same time. Rolling noctilucent - "night-shining" clouds - are rare enough themselves, but while Maciej Winiayczyk was filming
them in the  skies above Caithness, the aurora borealis also               put on a vivid display.



He spoke to the BBC about night filming the two phenomena.

 

 

Comment by Michael Grove on September 14, 2013 at 6:36

I was watching the devastating effects of the flooding from a helicopter a week or so ago !!! - which was being used to relay Eurosport HD  pictures of the professional cyclists involved in           the Tour of Collorado as one of the events of           this years USA Pro Challenge.

Comment by Michael Grove on October 27, 2013 at 12:32

... and here we go again - 

Winds exceeding 80mph will tear through the south of the country just as Monday morning commuters are heading to work, forecasters say.



The winds, brought in by what is expected to be the most violent storm to hit the UK in years, will come at “the worst possible time” and commuters should delay their journeys if necessary, a spokeswoman for the Met Office said. Gusts of up to 80mph will hit Cornwall and Devon from around 3am, moving across the country before arriving in East Anglia at 10am and continuing over the North Sea. The worst of the storm will hit London and the Home Counties between 6 and 7am, just as many commuters are heading to work.

Comment by Michael Grove on November 16, 2013 at 14:45

For many of us, inaccurate forecasts do little more than ruin a picnic or sully a recently washed car. We’re lucky. Weather is a sideshow to our daily lives. For others, though, advance knowledge     of the weather directly affects their livelihoods, from farmers to construction workers to airline pilots.

But there are times when weather affects us all, especially instances of severe weather like Hurricane Sandy. There, accurate forecasts can save lives, and those forecasts rely heavily on satellite data.

Unfortunately, in just a few years, part of our weather satellite system that is vital to forecasts will very likely go blind.

Comment by Michael Grove on February 18, 2020 at 14:23

Forecasting the future

The Met’s existing supercomputer, the Cray XC40, is one of the most powerful in the world dedicated to climate science and is due to reach its end of life in late 2022. The US, Korea, Germany and Australia use the same computer, while Japan relies on the Fujitsu PrimeHPC FX100 and China on IBM’s Flex System P46.

The XC40 has allowed the UK to become “pretty good” at weather forecasting, says Kirkman. “There’s a real community of science that sits around this." Each decade, the Met can predict an entire day further into the future. While the new computer may not speed up forecasts, it will improve their accuracy.

In the meantime a "human brain" supercomputer with 1 million processors has been switched on by British scientists for the first time, as a result of its creators at Manchester University's hope that it will be able to "unlock some of the secrets of how the human brain works".

                                                                                                                "I think we can expect the quality of forecasting to improve a lot," says Mark Parsons, director of Edinburgh Parallel Computing Centre at the University of Edinburgh. Weather is modelled by cutting the globe up into little blocks,” he explains. At one point the block size was 50 miles and whenever they buy a new computer they can reduce the size of the block, making predictions much more accurate.”

Currently, a model of the Earth is split up into squares that are 10km across. In the UK, forecasts by the Met are more accurate with squares at 1,500m across.Eventually, the new supercomputer could work at a resolution of just 100 million across, allowing forecasters to predict, for instance, if a particular road is at risk of flooding. Prof Mark Wilkinson at the University of Leicester says that the upgrade to the Met Office is “absolutely essential.

“You can’t make the types of models that they’re developing without a supercomputer. You gather lots of data from satellites and ground stations but the data themselves don’t tell you what’s going to happen, you need a computer capable of modelling long into the future.” he says.

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Comment by Michael Grove on February 29, 2020 at 12:53

A new array of sats will detect nearly every bolt of lightning in the Western Hemisphere, powering an early warning system for climate-change-fueled superstorms.
 
Daniel Oberhaus 02.27.2020 07:00 AM

For ages, earthlings regarded lightning as an indicator of godly wrath. To understand what displeased a higher power, you followed the damage from Thor's hammer strike, Raijin's drumbeat, or the javelins hurled down by Zeus.

Today scientists have their own God's-eye view of lightning, with instruments that orbit about 22,000 miles above the planet, monitoring nearly every single strike that flashes across the Western Hemisphere. Lightning, it turns out, is still an indicator: Increased electrical activity in the atmosphere is a bellwether for the onset of severe storms—a reflection of the damage inflicted not by any god but, at least in part, by human-made climate change.

To be sure, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has used a network of weather satellites to track storms since the mid-1970s. But six years ago, engineers at Lockheed Martin began assembling a new generation of four 6,000-pound weather satellites—known as GOES, or Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellites—with an array of instruments that can track everything from plumes of volcanic ash to space weather. In orbit, each satellite looks like an old-fashioned movie camera pointed toward Earth, with a boom sticking out the back (a device for measuring changes in the planet's magnetic field to study solar wind) and a massive solar panel where you'd expect to see a film reel. In the place where the lens would go is a device that picks up emissions from oxygen molecules that get excited by the energy of an electrical storm: a lightning detector.

Comment by Michael Grove on May 12, 2023 at 10:25

.. and despite all of the unequivocal evidence above our so-called Lords & Masters continue to ignore, from their own self-serving mind[SET] for whatever reason, the fact that [THE] times are in[DEED] changing in accordance with valid predictions that were known to them more than three decades ago.

At the end of the day [IT] IS after all about
Bucky's concepts of SYNERGETICS

Comment by Michael Grove on February 15, 2024 at 9:47
By 1965, the MIT Joint Program on the Science and Policy of Global Change had proven its value and [IT] was ICAO who delegated the control of Air Traffic flying across the North Atlantic to Canada and the UK, such that the planning of predetermined Westbound / Eastbound tracks takes place twice daily between the Gander and Prestwick Oceanic Air Traffic Control Centres and they are set in accordance with the meteorologically predicted flow of the Jetstreams, which during my time at Prestwick over half a century ago, rarely crossed the Hadley Cell boundaries. Those Jetstreams today however, increasingly gyrate across the cell boundary layers in accordance with a more violent manifestation of this particular meteorological phenomenon, as a direct result of the violent warmair v polarair interaction, which has itself itself resulted from planet earth hotting up, because of increased carbon dioxide being released from the earth into the atmosphere.

https://www.facebook.com/michael.grove.98/posts/7822922841069232
Comment by Michael Grove on February 24, 2024 at 11:18
What are El Niño and La Niña, and how do they change the weather by way of JET-STREAM activity ?

https://www.facebook.com/michael.grove.98/posts/7880096382018544

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