As I’ve previously reported, a senior EPA policy analyst says that NOAA and the EPA have been “sock puppets” for BP.NOAA has repeatedly denied the existence of underwater oil plumes (see this and this), calculated the spill to be only 5,000 barrels a…
Posts Tagged ‘national oceanic and atmospheric administration’
When University Scientists Found Underwater Oil Plumes, the Government Said Shut Up, Don’t Tell Anyone … and Then Tried to Discredit Them
Scientists are Finding Enormous Oil Plumes in the Deep Waters of the Gulf … Including One as Large as 10 Miles Long, 3 Miles Wide and 300 Feet Thick
As bad as the photos of the oil on the water in Gulf are, the size of the oil spill cannot be understood until you consider what is under the surface.As the Christian Science Monitor notes:The oil that can be seen from the surface is apparently just a …
Oil Spill Much Worse Than We’ve Been Told: “Official Estimates for the Flow of Oil … May be Just a Drop in the Bucket”
As a story in the Christian Science Monitor shows, the Gulf oil spill is much worse than we’ve been told: It’s now likely that the actual amount of the oil spill dwarfs the Coast Guard’s figure of 5,000 barrels, or 210,000 gallons, a day.Independent sc…
NOAA Tackles Climate Change
Responding to public demand for climate change information, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration plans to form an NOAA Climate Service line office and launches a new Website to serve as a single point of entry for NOAAs extensive climate information, data, products and services.
– To accommodate the increasingly number of requests for climate change
information, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said Feb. 8 it
is creating an NOAA Climate Service line office dedicated to bringing together
the agencys climate science and service delivery capabilities.
NO…
NOAA Tackles Climate Change
Responding to public demand for climate change information, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration plans to form a NOAA Climate Service line office and launches a new website to serve as a single point-of-entry for NOAAs extensive climate information, data, products and services.
– To accommodate the increasingly number of requests for climate change
information, the NOAA (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration)
said Feb. 8 it was creating a NOAA Climate Service line office
dedicated to bringing together the agencys climate science and service
delivery capabilitie…
Dry cold
A drying out of the stratosphere may help explain recent temperature trends at the Earth’s surface
THE stratosphere—specifically, the lower stratosphere—has, it seems, been drying out. Water vapour is a greenhouse gas, and the cooling effect on the Earth’s climate due to this desiccation may account for a fair bit of the slowdown in the rise of global temperatures seen over the past ten years. These are the somewhat surprising conclusions of a paper by Susan Solomon of America’s National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and her colleagues, which was published online by Science on January 28th. Whether the trend will continue, stop or reverse itself, though, is at present unknown.
The stratosphere sits on top of the troposphere, the lowest, densest layer of the atmosphere. The boundary between the two, the tropopause, is about 18km above your head, if you are in the tropics, and a few kilometres lower if you are at higher latitudes (or up a mountain). The tropopause separates a rowdy below from a sedate above. In the troposphere, the air at higher altitudes is in general cooler than the air below it, an unstable situation in which warm and often moist air below is endlessly buoying up into cooler air above. The resultant commotion creates clouds, storms and much of the rest of the world’s weather. In the stratosphere, the air gets warmer at higher altitudes, which provides stability. …
IBM ‘Stratus’ Supercomputer Is NOAA’s Newest Storm Chaser
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has completed the installation of its latest supercomputers, which will be used to help in forecasting weather and climate changes.
The massive Stratus supercomputer and its backup, Cirrus, will enable researchers to run more complex models in hopes of improving weather forecasting. NOAA also hopes to be able to increase the lead times for warnings about severe weather, such as hurricanes, tornadoes, wildfires, floods and winter storms, as well as air quality alerts. The supercomputers are based on IBM’s Power 575 systems and are four times faster than the previous supercomputers NOAA was using.
Stratus will be able to reach 69.7 teraflops, or trillions of calculations per second, enough to make it the 56th fastest system in the world, according to the Top500 list of the fastest supercomputers issued in June. Stratus will have billion of bytes of weather observations #151such as temperatures, wind speed, precipitation and atmospheric pressure #151fed into it each day.By Jeffrey Burt
– …
New IBM Supercomputers Boost NOAA Weather Forecasts
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration brings online two new IBM supercomputers capable of 69.7 trillion calculations per second to improve forecast accuracy and warning lead times for hurricanes, tornadoes, wildfires, floods, tsunamis, winter storms and other severe weather.
– With the ability to make 69.7 trillion calculations per second, the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s new supercomputers are gearing up to
quot;improve forecast accuracy and extend watch and warning lead times for
severe weather, including hurricanes, tornadoes, air quality, wild…



