Author Topic: Weather made (sort of) understandable: Part One  (Read 158 times)

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Weather made (sort of) understandable: Part One
« on: December 11, 2020, 04:11:50 pm »
 

Weather made (sort of) understandable: Part One
By Dr. Jay Lehr, Terigi Ciccone |December 10th, 2020|Climate|24 Comments

We shall start at the beginning with possibly a shocking exclamation. Weather is nothing more and nothing less than nature trying to equilibrate the balance of all energy transmitted to the Earth by the sun. It is a never ending multilevel show of physics trying to overcome imbalances and irregularities too numerous to accurately quantify and yet we try hour after hour day after day all across the Earth.

Climate is simply the trends of weather over a long period. We never stop talking about it. It’s too hot. It’s too cold. I’m tired of the rain. I wish this spring would last forever. Don’t worry, there’s plenty of snow at the top of the mountain. This is the weather. We talk about it, we complain about it, we wish about it, but nobody can do anything about it.

With the help of technology in recent decades, like satellites, Doppler radar, telemetry, etc., we are getting pretty good at predicting how the weather is most likely to change over the next SEVERAL days. In Florida and Hawaii, it’s so easy, we don’t even need weather persons. At other locations, say, near tall mountains or along the coastlines, predicting the weather is harder, and forecasts are less reliable.

https://www.cfact.org/2020/12/10/weather-made-sort-of-understandable-part-one/