| Caroline Harney Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md. (Phone: 301/286-0040) |
January 25, 2001 |
RELEASE: 01-9
VIRTUAL RAINS HERALD DAWN OF NEW CLIMATE UNDERSTANDING
Weather prediction is hard enough. But what are the
possibilities for predicting events related to weather?
With new tools being developed at NASA's Goddard Space Flight
Center in Greenbelt, Md., and NASA's ever increasing suite of Earth
observations, scientists just might be on the road to estimating
future weather-related incidents.
A recent real world example suggests just how valuable this kind
of information could be. Following the devastating season of
wildfires in the western United States, many questions remain. Could
officials have predicted the conditions for the severity of last
summer's fire season, and therefore planned differently?
At Goddard, experts are developing a system that someday soon
might be useful in making those predictions. Oceanographer Dr. David
Adamec and a team of earth scientists and others are using satellite
measurements and conventional temperature readings of the oceans to
drive an advanced computer simulation depicting seasonal to annual
changes in the land and atmosphere.
The goal of the research is to use the model to forecast real
world, short-term climate trends. "We've essentially constructed a
climate in cyberspace," said Adamec. "With the kind of dedicated
digital horsepower at our disposal, this model goes far beyond
anything available to the desktop world."
Adamec says the simulation churns its digital winds and pelts
the electronic ground with simulated rain inside the heart of a Cray
T3E supercomputer. Although some years old now, NASA's T3E is still
one of the fastest systems in the world.
"The sheer speed at which we are able to run the model on the
Cray T3E allows for advances in climate research," says Adamec.
Performing billions of calculations per second, the system
simulates the complex processes that produce short-term climate
changes. The resulting images and data provide clues as to possible
scenarios for seasonal and short-term climate trends. "It's a
pro-active approach toward short-term global climatological
research," he said.
Adamec's team focuses on the model's interconnectedness of the
atmosphere, ocean and land. By combining climatological interactions
in an environment that can be fully controlled, the researchers can
examine the Earth's climate and seasonal behavior in detail.
One of the most powerful aspects of the work is the ability to
change conditions to suit experimental needs. This ability has
allowed them to use the conditions leading to last summer's fires as
a test case for their model. Using actual ocean data during the
conflagrations, Adamec's team looked to see if their computer model
arrived at the same conclusion as the events in the real world.
Often, summer rains begin from evaporating soil moisture. Since
a layer of moist air tends to remain closer to the ground than a
layer of dryer air, it is more easily heated during the day due to
its proximity to the warm ground. Eventually, that heated, moist air
rises and produces rain clouds.
But with last year's La Niņa spring, part of that cycle was
interrupted. The soil did not contain much moisture going into the
summer due to a dry spring. When soil moisture is limited, the
mechanism for summertime precipitation is deficient, and the result
is a season of drought that sets prime conditions for fires.
What did NASA's supercomputer predict? Using data prior to the
fire season, the model essentially concluded that dry conditions
would persist through the season.
While in this instance the model was right on, Adamec says it is
still a long way from completion. "The model still cannot reliably
predict complex climate changes into the future to the degree that
state or federal governmental agencies and communities can set their
calendars and budgets," he said. "But with recent, stunning advances
in computer technology, as well as continuing developments in using
satellites to acquire new data, we are definitely making progress
toward that end."
Adamec's team hopes their work will lead to not only highly
precise methods for climate prediction, but also tools for
understanding how it works at the most sophisticated levels.
Research into the forces that drive short and long-term changes
to the land and atmosphere are part of NASA's Earth Science
Enterprise, a research program designed to study the Earth's land,
oceans, air, ice and life as a total system.
Information and images to support this story are available at: http://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/imagewall/climate.html
Additional information on NASA's high-performance scientific computing facility can be found at: http://webserv.gsfc.nasa.gov/SCIDOC/HP.html