Archive for the ‘climatology’ category: Page 137
Oct 15, 2018
A first look at China’s Mars simulation base out in the Gobi Desert
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: climatology, space
China’s first Mars simulation base opened to the press on Friday in Gansu Province in the northwest of the country, providing a glimpse of the project mainly intended to popularise space among youth.
The base is located in the Gobi Desert, 40 kilometres away from the downtown area of Jinchang, a city in Gansu. The natural features, landscape and climate are being described as resembling Martian conditions.
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Oct 13, 2018
Could Tech Make Government As We Know It Irrelevant?
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: climatology, governance, government, sustainability
Governments are one of the last strongholds of an undigitized, linear sector of humanity, and they are falling behind fast. Apart from their struggle to keep up with private sector digitization, federal governments are in a crisis of trust.
At almost a 60-year low, only 18 percent of Americans reported that they could trust their government “always” or “most of the time” in a recent Pew survey. And the US is not alone. The Edelman Trust Barometer revealed last year that 41 percent of the world population distrust their nations’ governments.
In many cases, the private sector—particularly tech—is driving greater progress in regulation-targeted issues like climate change than state leaders. And as decentralized systems, digital disruption, and private sector leadership take the world by storm, traditional forms of government are beginning to fear irrelevance. However, the fight for exponential governance is not a lost battle.
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Oct 11, 2018
Hurricane Michael hits Florida
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: climatology, habitats
Aerial footage shows rows of damaged and destroyed homes lining the beach in Mexico Beach, Florida, after Hurricane Michael slammed into the town on October 10, 2018. It was the strongest hurricane on record to hit the Florida Panhandle.
Credit: WJAX
Oct 4, 2018
Wide-scale US wind power could cause significant warming
Posted by Bill Kemp in category: climatology
A Harvard study raises questions about just how much wind should be part of a climate solution.
Sep 26, 2018
Scientists have been drilling into the ocean floor for 50 years – here’s what they’ve found so far
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: climatology, sustainability
The ocean floor holds unique information about Earth’s history. Scientific ocean drilling, which started 50 years ago, has yielded insights into climate change, geohazards and the key conditions for life.
Sep 19, 2018
New study tracks Hurricane Harvey stormwater with GPS
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: climatology
In a new NASA-led study, scientists used GPS data to track where Hurricane Harvey’s stormwater went and how long it took to dissipate.
Sep 19, 2018
Space Junk Now Presents a Clear and Present Danger
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: climatology, space
Sep 16, 2018
This is how the world ends: will we soon see category 6 hurricanes?
Posted by Alexei Turchin in categories: climatology, mathematics
Not the end, but interesting… Also, note that hupercanes are possible products of some mathematical instability, where the speed start to grow almost unlimited after some threshold. Buts Cat 6 is not a hypercane, as in the hypercane winds will be 500 mph.
There is no such thing as a category 6 hurricane or tropical storm — yet. But a combination of warmer oceans and more water in the atmosphere could make the devastation of 2017 pale in comparison .
Sep 15, 2018
Scientists: World’s warming; expect more intense hurricanes
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: climatology, computing, sustainability
WASHINGTON (AP) — A warmer world makes for nastier hurricanes. Scientists say they are wetter, possess more energy and intensify faster.
Their storm surges are more destructive because climate change has already made the seas rise. And lately, the storms seem to be stalling more often and thus dumping more rain.
Study after study shows that climate change in general makes hurricanes worse. But determining the role of global warming in a specific storm such as Hurricane Florence or Typhoon Mangkhut is not so simple — at least not without detailed statistical and computer analyses.