About DBIS   | Story archive   | Contact DBIS  | DBIS home

Boat Safety From Outer Space

Meteorologists Keep Boaters Safer with Improved Weather Forecasting Device

July 1, 2009

Meteorologists designed a program that delivers improved short term weather forecasts and packaged it into a device for boaters to use at sea. The device uses data taken from satellites that are used to study the Earth's climate. The information is then used to show detailed visuals of sea surface temperatures, images of cloud cover and signs of developing storms. An added feature--a fish finder--tells fisherman where high concentrations of plankton are located, which are likely to attract fish to the area.

read the full story...

Science Insider

WHAT'S THE FORECAST: Weather forecasting is the application of science and technology to predict the state of the atmosphere for a future time and a given location. For millennia people have tried to forecast the weather. In 650 BC, the Babylonians predicted the weather from cloud patterns. In about 340 BC, Aristotle described weather patterns in Meteorologica. Chinese weather prediction lore extends at least as far back as 300 BC. Ancient weather forecasting methods usually relied on observed patterns of events. For example, it might be observed that if the sunset was particularly red, the following day often brought fair weather. This experience accumulated over the generations to produce weather lore. Today, weather forecasts are made by collecting data about the current state of the atmosphere and using computer models of the atmospheric processes to project how the atmosphere will evolve.

HOW STORMS DEVELOP: Storm clouds form as moisture evaporates from the earth into the atmosphere. The air cools off rapidly as it reaches higher altitudes. Sometimes a cold front -- where the cold air from one air mass meets the surrounding air -- will force warm, moist air upward into the colder air. This cools the water vapor and it condenses onto dust and dirt particles in the air, called condensation nuclei, collectively forming clouds. Nuclei made of ice are usually present before rain or snow fall. The process continues: more and more water vapor turns into liquid and the moist air gets warmer and rises higher and higher. A thunderstorm results. Recent research demonstrates that most condensation nuclei are actually biological in origin, with bacteria at the core.

The American Meteorological Society, the American Geophysical Union , and the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc.-USA contributed to the information contained in the TV portion of this report.

Video help

Latest stories

  • A Satellite Named Violet and a Student Named Amanda
  • Behind the Scenes with the K-Team
  • Deep Space Discoveries
  • Dogs Fighting Cancer
  • Earthquake! What's Your Risk

More information on this story

About SPoRT

To Go Inside This Science:
Dr. Gary Jedlovec
NASA/MSFC
Huntsville, Alabama 35805,
256-961-7966
gary.jedlovec@nasa.gov

American Meteorological Society
Boston, MA 02108-3693
617-227-2425

Peter Weiss
American Geophysical Union
Washington, DC 20009-1277
pweiss@agu.org
1-800-966-2481

Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc.
IEEE
IEEE-USA
Pender McCarter
p.mccarter@ieee.org


© 2011 American Institute of Physics