Applied Meteorology Unit (AMU) Quarterly Report

By providing a global view with a level playing field (no region missed because of unfavorable surface conditions or political boundaries), satellites have made major contributions to improved monitoring and understanding of our constantly changing planet. The global view has allowed surprising real...

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Main Authors: Watson, Leela, Bauman, William, Crawford, Winifred, Wheeler, Mark, Barrett, Joe
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2060/20100033632
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spelling ftnasantrs:oai:casi.ntrs.nasa.gov:20100033632 2023-05-15T13:43:16+02:00 Applied Meteorology Unit (AMU) Quarterly Report Watson, Leela Bauman, William Crawford, Winifred Wheeler, Mark Barrett, Joe Unclassified, Unlimited, Publicly available July 31, 2010 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/2060/20100033632 unknown Document ID: 20100033632 http://hdl.handle.net/2060/20100033632 Copyright, Distribution under U.S. Government purpose rights CASI Meteorology and Climatology KSC-2010-186 KSC-2010-267 2010 ftnasantrs 2019-07-21T01:11:07Z By providing a global view with a level playing field (no region missed because of unfavorable surface conditions or political boundaries), satellites have made major contributions to improved monitoring and understanding of our constantly changing planet. The global view has allowed surprising realizations like the relative sparsity of lightning strikes over oceans and the large-scale undulations on the massive Antarctic ice sheet. It has allowed the tracking of all sorts of phenomena, including aerosols, both natural and anthropogenic,as they move with the atmospheric circulation and impact weather and human health. But probably nothing that the global view allows is more important in the long term than its provision of unbiased data sets to address the issue of global change, considered by many to be among the most important issues facing humankind today. With satellites we can monitor atmospheric temperatures at all latitudes and longitudes, and obtain a global average that lessens the likelihood of becoming endlessly mired in the confusions brought about by the certainty of regional differences. With satellites we can monitor greenhouse gases such as CO2 not just above individual research stations but around the globe. With satellites we can monitor the polar sea ice covers, as we have done since the late 1970s, determining and quantifying the significant reduction in Arctic sea ice and the slight growth in Antarctic sea ice over that period. With satellites we can map the full extent and changes in the Antarctic stratospheric ozone depletions that were first identified from a single ground station; and through satellite data we have witnessed from afar land surface changes brought about by humans both intentionally, as with wide-scale deforestation, and unintentionally, as with the decay of the Aral Sea. The satellite data are far from sufficient for all that we need in order to understand the global system and forecast its changes, as we also need sophisticated climate models, in situ process studies, and data sets that extend back well before the introduction of satellite technology. Nuomthc)cmm, the repetitive, global view provided by satellites is contributing in a major way to our improved recognition of how the Earth is changing, a recognition that is none too soon in view of the magnitude of the impacts that humans can now have. Other/Unknown Material Antarc* Antarctic Arctic Human health Ice Sheet Sea ice NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS) Arctic Antarctic The Antarctic
institution Open Polar
collection NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
op_collection_id ftnasantrs
language unknown
topic Meteorology and Climatology
spellingShingle Meteorology and Climatology
Watson, Leela
Bauman, William
Crawford, Winifred
Wheeler, Mark
Barrett, Joe
Applied Meteorology Unit (AMU) Quarterly Report
topic_facet Meteorology and Climatology
description By providing a global view with a level playing field (no region missed because of unfavorable surface conditions or political boundaries), satellites have made major contributions to improved monitoring and understanding of our constantly changing planet. The global view has allowed surprising realizations like the relative sparsity of lightning strikes over oceans and the large-scale undulations on the massive Antarctic ice sheet. It has allowed the tracking of all sorts of phenomena, including aerosols, both natural and anthropogenic,as they move with the atmospheric circulation and impact weather and human health. But probably nothing that the global view allows is more important in the long term than its provision of unbiased data sets to address the issue of global change, considered by many to be among the most important issues facing humankind today. With satellites we can monitor atmospheric temperatures at all latitudes and longitudes, and obtain a global average that lessens the likelihood of becoming endlessly mired in the confusions brought about by the certainty of regional differences. With satellites we can monitor greenhouse gases such as CO2 not just above individual research stations but around the globe. With satellites we can monitor the polar sea ice covers, as we have done since the late 1970s, determining and quantifying the significant reduction in Arctic sea ice and the slight growth in Antarctic sea ice over that period. With satellites we can map the full extent and changes in the Antarctic stratospheric ozone depletions that were first identified from a single ground station; and through satellite data we have witnessed from afar land surface changes brought about by humans both intentionally, as with wide-scale deforestation, and unintentionally, as with the decay of the Aral Sea. The satellite data are far from sufficient for all that we need in order to understand the global system and forecast its changes, as we also need sophisticated climate models, in situ process studies, and data sets that extend back well before the introduction of satellite technology. Nuomthc)cmm, the repetitive, global view provided by satellites is contributing in a major way to our improved recognition of how the Earth is changing, a recognition that is none too soon in view of the magnitude of the impacts that humans can now have.
format Other/Unknown Material
author Watson, Leela
Bauman, William
Crawford, Winifred
Wheeler, Mark
Barrett, Joe
author_facet Watson, Leela
Bauman, William
Crawford, Winifred
Wheeler, Mark
Barrett, Joe
author_sort Watson, Leela
title Applied Meteorology Unit (AMU) Quarterly Report
title_short Applied Meteorology Unit (AMU) Quarterly Report
title_full Applied Meteorology Unit (AMU) Quarterly Report
title_fullStr Applied Meteorology Unit (AMU) Quarterly Report
title_full_unstemmed Applied Meteorology Unit (AMU) Quarterly Report
title_sort applied meteorology unit (amu) quarterly report
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/2060/20100033632
op_coverage Unclassified, Unlimited, Publicly available
geographic Arctic
Antarctic
The Antarctic
geographic_facet Arctic
Antarctic
The Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Arctic
Human health
Ice Sheet
Sea ice
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Arctic
Human health
Ice Sheet
Sea ice
op_source CASI
op_relation Document ID: 20100033632
http://hdl.handle.net/2060/20100033632
op_rights Copyright, Distribution under U.S. Government purpose rights
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