Texas Supercomputer Upgrading the Hurricane Forecast
aarondubrow writes "Researchers used the Ranger supercomputer to test a new, high-resolution hurricane forecasting system that incorporates Doppler radar data from planes flying into the storm. The forecasts were shown to improve intensity predictions by an average of 20 to 40 percent over the official forecasts of the National Hurricane Center (NHC). The prediction system is being hailed as a breakthrough and is one of a handful being assessed by the NHC to become part of the operational forecasting system used in emergency situations."
GreatBunzinni has been posting anonymous accusations listing a whole bunch of Slashdot accounts as being part of a marketing campaign for Microsoft, without any evidence.
GreatBunzinni has accidentally outed himself as this anonymous poster. Here, he writes the same post almost verbatim, first using his logged-in account and then in an anonymous post submitted days later. Note the use of the exact same terminology and phrasing in both posts.
Half the accounts he attacks don't even post pro-Microsoft rhetoric. The one thing they appear to have in common is that they have been critical of Google in the past. GreatBunzinni has been using multiple accounts to post these "shill" accusations, such as Galestar, NicknameOne, and flurp.
That's not the problem. The problem is that moderators gave him +5 Informative and are now modding down the accused, even for legitimate posts. Metamoderation is supposed to address this by filtering out the bad moderators, but clearly it's not working.
This "shill" crap that has been flying around lately has to stop. It's restricting a variety of viewpoints from participating on the site and creating an echo chamber.
As TFA states, while the location predictions have been improving significantly, the best hurricane intensity predictions are only slightly better than what can be obtained from a Ouija board. (No offense intended to those in the field; I know it's a tough problem.)
Just defining "intensity" in a useful way can be difficult. For example, if Storm A has a region in the Northeast quadrant with 100 mph (161 km/h) winds, but elsewhere winds do not exceed 80 mph (129 km/h), and Storm B has 100 mph (161 km/h) winds in all four quadrants, both have the same max wind speed. Which is more intense? What if Storm B has 95 mph (153 km/h) winds in all four quadrants? What if the two storms have the same wind speeds, but are different sizes? If Storm C has lower wind speed than Storm D but, due to its slower forward speed or other reasons, drops five times as much rain, which one was the more intense storm?
When I counsel high school and college students, I always tell them to "work on important problems." Even though I make a point of saying that the definition of "important" is "what's important to you," I am always asked for examples of "important problems." Getting better hurricane intensity forecasts is one of the examples I always mention.
Ranger runs CentOS.
...to improve intensity predictions by an average of 20 to 40 percent...
Can someone more knowledgeable in this area explain this in laymen's terms?
Can they now predict whether or not a specific tree will be uprooted? Or just give a 40% more accurate estimate for damage in an area?
Or are they now 40% less off when they predict the wind speeds of a hurricane?
Curious,
AC.
Some more advances and we will be at Educated Guess.
I love Jesus, except for his foreign policy.
Seems like most of them are Asian. And we wonder where is American talent and workforce with advanced degrees.
Investment banking? That's where the money is...
So now this new computer system is going to put hurricane scientists out of work. Think of their children!!!!
Why not replace the hurricane plane with a bunch of drones equipped for the task. Then you could have a half dozen flying around the hurricane at the same time. Yes that is just moving the pilot from the cockpit to command room (or where ever they sit), until they make them autonomous.
Looks like most of the funding came from the Feds. Once again an anti-government Red State is more than happy to suck off the government teet. Let them pay for their own supercomputer.
putting the 'B' in LGBTQ+
And we wonder where is American talent and workforce with advanced degrees.
They spend most of their time in places like Washington DC and Tyler TX courthouses redistributing wealth instead of creating it.
http://www.hurricaneknowledge.com
If this model really depends on the airborne radars, it is in trouble already. NOAA's P3 fleet is old, aging and will be too expensive to replace in today's budget climate. And replace with what? Retired Navy airframes have more hours and are likely in worse shape then the NOAA ones. The Air Force uses C-130s but they don't go as low (3k) as the NOAA planes. While that could be crew training, it could also be air frame stress related. I suspect it will be a long time before drones can fly the same patterns as the human planes given the communications issues involved. The health and life of the NOAA fleet was directly tied to the Navy's. As the Navy retires, so will go the NOAA planes. Even if you find a new air frame to use, fitting them out, training, testing and making them operational is a huge job that will cost big bucks that NOAA isn't going to have.