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Global Winds Michael J. Garay

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Presentation on theme: "Global Winds Michael J. Garay"— Presentation transcript:

1 Global Winds Michael J. Garay
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology Pasadena, California, USA

2 http://geography. sierra. cc. ca

3 How to teach this?

4 National Science Education Standards
Earth Science Energy in the Earth system Heating of the Earth’s surface and atmosphere by the sun drives convection within the atmosphere and ocean, producing winds and ocean currents (9-12) Global winds are part of a pattern of air circulation across the Earth and include the trade winds, westerlies and the polar easterlies

5 The “Scientific Method”

6 Three Approaches Factual Historical Synthesis
These are “facts” that students should know Historical Science (i.e., learning about the world) is done by people (and not always “scientists”) Synthesis Science provides a unifying idea (theory) that explains many different things

7 Global Wind Systems

8 Historical Aristotle George Hadley Christopher Columbus Edmond Halley
William Ferrel Isaac Newton

9 World Map Showing the “Four Winds”

10 “T-O” Map Showing the “Eight Winds”

11 World Map Showing the “Twelve Winds” of Aristotle

12

13 Edmond Halley’s Map of the Major Global Wind Systems (1686)

14 The “Scientific Method”

15 George Hadley

16 The Ferrel Cell

17 The Ferrel Cell

18 http://geography. sierra. cc. ca

19 Synthesis

20 The “Scientific Method”

21 Thinking Like a Scientist

22 “Earthrise” from Apollo 8
December 24, 1968

23 Apollo 17 View of the Earth
“Blue Marble” December 7, 1972

24 “Blue Marble” from MODIS (Available as an iPhone background)

25 MODIS Land, Ocean, Ice, Cloud

26 MODIS Land Only

27 The Hadley Circulation

28 MISR Directional Hemispheric Reflectance (DHR)

29

30 One Month of Precipitation from the
Tropical Rainfall Measurement Mission (TRMM)

31 MODIS Land, Ocean, Ice, Cloud

32 MODIS Cloud Only

33 http://geography. sierra. cc. ca

34 Jupiter Composite from the Cassini Spacecraft

35 Seeing the Wind

36 Ocean Surface Winds from the QuikSCAT Instrument on the SeaWinds Satellite

37

38 QuikSCAT Mean Ocean Winds Annual Climatology

39 NCEP Reanalysis Mean Ocean Surface Winds Annual Climatology

40 NCEP Reanalysis Mean Winds Annual 0 - 1 km Climatology

41 NCEP Reanalysis Mean Winds Annual 1 - 2 km Climatology

42 NCEP Reanalysis Mean Winds Annual 2 - 3.5 km Climatology

43 NCEP Reanalysis Mean Winds Annual 3.5 - 5 km Climatology

44 NCEP Reanalysis Mean Winds Annual 5 - 7 km Climatology

45 NCEP Reanalysis Mean Winds Annual 7 - 10 km Climatology

46 NCEP-2/MISR Zonal Mean Wind Plots
December 2001 – August 2007

47 Multi-angle Imaging SpectroRadiometer (MISR)
Nine view angles at Earth surface: 70.5º forward to 70.5º backward Nine 14-bit pushbroom cameras 275 m km sampling Four spectral bands at each angle: 446, 558, 672, 866 nm 400-km swath: 9-day coverage at equator, 2-day at poles 7 minutes to observe each scene at all nine angles 47

48 48

49 MISR Low Cloud Wind Vectors for January 2011

50 MISR Low Cloud Wind Vectors for July 2011

51 Where Does the Wind Blow?

52 Frequency of Wind Speeds Greater than 20 m/s (45 mph)
Height ≤ 1 km AGL Low High

53 Frequency of Wind Speeds Greater than 20 m/s (45 mph)
Height ≤ 2 km AGL Low High

54 Frequency of Wind Speeds Greater than 20 m/s (45 mph)
Height ≤ 3 km AGL Low High

55 Frequency of Wind Speeds Greater than 20 m/s (45 mph)
Height ≤ 4 km AGL Low High

56 Frequency of Wind Speeds Greater than 20 m/s (45 mph)
Height ≤ 5 km AGL Low High

57 Frequency of Wind Speeds Greater than 20 m/s (45 mph) over Africa (DJF)
Mediterranean Sea 35°N 30°N Qattara Depression Algeria 2 2 Egypt Libya 25°N Sahara Desert Selima Sand Sheet Mauritania Niger Chad 20°N 2 Mali Ténéré Desert 3 2 3 2 Western Sahara Desert 2 4 2 5 13 9 3 5 19 8 15 8 Figure 1. 2 2 2 5 4 15 4 7 6 15°N Sudan 2 8 2 3 Bodélé Depression 10°N Nigeria 10°W 5°W 0°E 5°E 10°E 15°E 20°E 25°E 30°E 35°E

58 Figure 1. MODIS-Terra true color image from 20 February 2008 around 0930 UT over the Bodélé region in Chad from Google Earth™. Superimposed on the image are representative MISR image blocks in magenta and the CALIPSO lidar ground track in green. Note that the time difference between the Terra satellite (MISR) overpass and the A-Train (CALIPSO) overpass is approximately 3 hours. The primary dust generating region of the Bodélé is in the center of the image, with a smaller dust source to the southeast. Lake Chad is in the lower left of the image and the Tibesti Mountains are the dark region in the top center of the image.

59 The Bodélé Depression Credit: Giles (2005), Nature, “The Dustiest Place on Earth”

60 Credits: Giles (2005), Nature, [Lower left, upper right]
Bristow et al. (2009), Geomorphology [Upper left, lower right]

61 Dust from the Sahara Desert Reaches Houston, Texas
United States Aug 29 Aug 26 Aug 25 Aug 24 Aug 23 Aug 22 Aug 21 Aug 20 Aug 19 Africa South America Observations from the Multi-angle Imaging SpectroRadiometer (MISR) Instrument on NASA’s Terra Satellite

62

63

64 Current MISR Wind Product
Some Resources MISR misr.jpl.nasa.gov/gallery/worldmap.html JPL (Solar System) photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/Help/ImageGallery.html NASA (Animations) svs.gsfc.nasa.gov Google Image Search New and Improved! Current MISR Wind Product New MISR Wind Product


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