Posted on 10/20/2015 8:55:49 AM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach
From NASA Goddard and JPL:
NASA studying 2015 El Niño event as never before
Every two to seven years, an unusually warm pool of water sometimes two to three degrees Celsius higher than normal develops across the eastern tropical Pacific Ocean to create a natural short-term climate change event. This warm condition, known as El Niño, affects the local aquatic environment, but also spurs extreme weather patterns around the world, from flooding in California to droughts in Australia. This winter, the 2015-16 El Niño event will be better observed from space than any previous El Niño.
This years El Niño is already strong and appears likely to equal the event of 1997-98, the strongest El Niño on record, according to the World Meteorological Organization. All 19 of NASAs current orbiting Earth-observing missions were launched after 1997. In the past two decades, NASA has made tremendous progress in gathering and analyzing data that help researchers understand more about the mechanics and global impacts of El Niño.
El Niño is a fascinating phenomenon because it has such far-reaching and diverse impacts. The fact that fires in Indonesia are linked with circulation patterns that influence rainfall over the United States shows how complex and interconnected the Earth system is, said Lesley Ott, research meteorologist at NASAs Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Maryland.
Using NASA satellite observations in tandem with supercomputer processing power for modeling systems, scientists have a comprehensive suite of tools to analyze El Niño events and their global impacts as never before. Throughout this winter, NASA will share the latest scientific insights and imagery updates related to El Niño.
For instance, scientists are learning how El Niño affects the year-to-year variability for fire seasons in the western United States, Amazon and Indonesia. El Niño may also affect the yearly variability of the ground-level pollutant ozone that severely affects human health. Researchers will be keenly focused on how the current El Niño will affect the drought in California.
We still have a lot to learn about these connections, and NASAs suite of satellites will help us understand these processes in a new and deeper way, said Ott.
Many NASA satellites observe environmental factors that are associated with El Niño evolution and its impacts, including sea surface temperature, sea surface height, surface currents, atmospheric winds and ocean color. The joint NASA/NOAA/CNES/EUMETSAT Jason-2 satellite measures sea surface height, which is especially useful in quantifying the heat stored and released by the oceans during El Niño years.
NASA satellites also help scientists see the global impact of El Niño. The warmer than normal eastern Pacific Ocean has far-reaching effects worldwide. These events spur disasters like fires and floods. They change storm tracks, cloud cover and other weather patterns, and they have devastating effects on fisheries and other industries.
NASAs Earth-observing satellites help monitor those and other impacts by measuring land and ocean conditions that both influence and are affected by El Niño. For instance, NASAs Global Precipitation Measurement Mission provides worldwide precipitation measurements every three hours. NASAs Soil Moisture Active Passive mission measures soil moisture in the top layer of land. Both of these satellites are useful for monitoring drought, improving flood warnings and watching crop and fishing industries.
NASA is at the forefront in providing key observations of El Niño and advancing our understanding of its role in shaping Earths weather and climate patterns, said Duane Waliser, chief scientist of the Earth Science and Technology Directorate at NASAs Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California.
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Of course, these data have been falsified before.
After Katrina, all the climate experts predicted a Katrina every year hence and other disasters.
Of course they will occur...here and there...but they always have....and always will. It's about "when".
I'd say a lot of this sets the stage for that ridiculous insurance coverage....where there need not be any.
Listen to Joe Bastardi discuss the current El Nino and why it isn’t an exact duplicate of the 1997 one that is being talked about by ‘everyone’.
http://www.weatherbell.com/saturday-summary-october-17-2015
Are we all gonna die again?
Oh gosh, I hope so, I remember my wife and I making love on the porch in December...in Minnesota!!
(Sorry, I know TMI, but we were out in the country, nobody would’ve seen anything).
I hope it’s a big one!
Above-average temperatures in Michigan will be a welcome change after last year.
Bush’s fault.
We all know that global warming is caused by CO2 and not El Niño/s
“I remember my wife and I making love on the porch”
Ha!! Pic’s or it didn’t happen!! j/k..
Careful out there, doesn’t Laz live in Minnesota somewhere? he may come a lookin..
I live across the border from you in Wisco - I remember that season well too - I think we hit 75 a couple of times in December.. crazy.
It'[s like we don't exist out here.
Curse you cow farts!!!!!!
Nevermind - Laz flies the Georgia flag, had to check... so you are sort of safe :D
Thanks....doesn’t look so good for drought relief out here in California,....if I understand him.
Al Gore will be happy.
Obama will be happy.
97% of Climate "Scientists" will be happy.
Like 2012 I think it was. Almost no winter at all and I was loving it.
I played my own drinking game with this article. Every time I read ‘NASA’, I tooooook ahhh jinnnnk. Naowwwww eyezzz combleeeeedeeely jjjjjjunk. (belch)
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