TheReference

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Earth may be cancelling the 2012-2013 El Niño

Posted on 4:44 AM by Unknown
The Earth was experiencing a La Niña in 2010-2011 and another one in 2011-2012.

Recall that La Niña is a "little girl" in Spanish and as you may know, girls have "something missing" in the middle between the two hemispheres – in particular, the equatorial Pacific Ocean is cooler (has less heat) than the normal. It goes in the other way around for El Niño, a Spanish "little boy" who has something extra (extra heat) in the middle.



Due to the influence of the Pacific Ocean dynamics on the globe, a La Niña usually brings a cooling of the global mean temperature with a 6-month delay or so. The La Niña episodes may be partly blamed on relatively cool years 2011 and 2012. On the contrary, the globally warmest modern year 1998 was mostly due to the "El Niño of the century" in 1997-1998.

However, by June 2012, the cooler La Niña conditions were over and superseded by ENSO-neutral conditions. By August, it looked almost certain that in the 2012-2013 winter, Earth would be enjoying a warm El Niño episode. That episode could make the year 2013 rather warm; it's the first year the alarmists hope that it could break the records because the denier year 2012 will surely refuse to do so much like 13 previous years. ;-) The year 2012 will end up being very similarly warm as the rather cool year 2011, just a little bit higher than that.




However, it no longer looks like a safe bet that the Earth will switch into El Niño conditions anytime soon. In fact, the El Niño symptoms were visibly weakening in the last month. As the Weekly ENSO Report at the NOAA El Niño group announced yesterday, the most recent temperature anomalies (in °C) averaged over various regions of the equatorial Pacific are:



The map shows the locations of the Niño 1+2, 3, 3.4, and 4 regions. The number 1 starts near the South American western beaches and that's where the perturbations typically start, too. They're spreading towards the West (note that the thin equatorial strip is the only place where winds mostly go to the West and not from the West) and Niño 3.4 which is close to the middle of the equatorial Pacific is considered the most characteristic place that determines the ONI index.

You average the temperature anomaly over there and when it's above +0.5 °C or below –0.5 °C for five consecutive overlapping 3-month periods, you may call it the El Niño episode or the La Niña episode, respectively. However, you see that this parameter was standing at +0.1 °C in the most recent week, almost at zero, indicating neutral (Spanish sexless baby) conditions.



This is how the temperature anomalies varied in recent months. The region 1+2 is more variable; it is slightly negative, –0.1 °C. But you see that the region 3 was dramatically dropping during September and it is actually negative right now, also at –0.1 °C. Correspondingly, the wording was changed from an "almost guaranteed El Niño in coming months" to "possibly neutral conditions". Neutral conditions are also suggested by the CFS.v2 computer model average.

It must be frustrating for the climate alarmists who have been lying to the whole world for many, many years that the Earth is constantly heating up, perhaps every day or every year, and the most unhinged ones even say that this trend is dangerous and should force us to change the behavior or the basics of the industrial civilization. Except that since 1998 which is a rather long time ago, they haven't been able to "boast" which a warmer year. These folks must feel like piles of rubbish, unscrupulous fraudsters – i.e. as what they actually are.
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Posted in climate, weather records | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Ostragene: realtime evolution in a dirty city
    Ostrava , an industrial hub in the Northeast of the Czech Republic, is the country's third largest city (300,000). It's full of coal...
  • Likely: latest Atlantic hurricane-free date at least since 1941
    Originally posted on September 4th. Now, 5 days later, it seems that no currently active systems will grow to a hurricane so the records wi...
  • Origin of the name Motl
    When I was a baby, my father would often say that we come a French aristocratic dynasty de Motl – for some time, I tended to buy it ;-). Muc...
  • Papers on the ER-EPR correspondence
    This new, standardized, elegant enough name of the Maldacena-Susskind proposal that I used in the title already exceeds the price of this b...
  • Bernhard Riemann: an anniversary
    Georg Friedrich Bernhard Riemann was born in a village in the Kingdom of Hanover on September 17th, 1826 and died in Selasca (Verbania), No...
  • New iPhone likely to have a fingerprint scanner
    One year ago, Apple bought AuthenTec , a Prague-based security company ( 7 Husinecká Street ), for $356 million. One may now check the Czech...
  • Prediction isn't the right method to learn about the past
    Happy New Year 2013 = 33 * 61! The last day of the year is a natural moment for a blog entry about time. At various moments, I wanted to wri...
  • Lubošification of Scott Aaronson is underway
    In 2006, quantum computing guy Scott Aaronson declared that he was ready to write and defend any piece of nonsensical claim about quantum gr...
  • A slower speed of light: MIT relativistic action game
    In the past, this blog focused on relativistic optical effects and visualizations of Einstein's theory: special relativity (download Re...
  • Eric Weinstein's invisible theory of nothing
    On Friday, I received an irritated message from Mel B. who had read articles in the Guardian claiming that Eric Weinstein found a theory of ...

Categories

  • alternative physics (7)
  • astronomy (49)
  • biology (19)
  • cars (2)
  • climate (93)
  • colloquium (1)
  • computers (18)
  • Czechoslovakia (57)
  • Denmark (1)
  • education (7)
  • Europe (33)
  • everyday life (16)
  • experiments (83)
  • France (5)
  • freedom vs PC (11)
  • fusion (3)
  • games (2)
  • geology (5)
  • guest (6)
  • heliophysics (2)
  • IQ (1)
  • Kyoto (5)
  • landscape (9)
  • LHC (40)
  • markets (40)
  • mathematics (37)
  • Middle East (12)
  • missile (9)
  • murders (4)
  • music (3)
  • philosophy of science (73)
  • politics (98)
  • religion (10)
  • Russia (5)
  • science and society (217)
  • sports (5)
  • string vacua and phenomenology (114)
  • stringy quantum gravity (90)
  • TBBT (5)
  • textbooks (2)
  • TV (8)
  • video (22)
  • weather records (30)

Blog Archive

  • ►  2013 (341)
    • ►  September (14)
    • ►  August (42)
    • ►  July (36)
    • ►  June (39)
    • ►  May (38)
    • ►  April (41)
    • ►  March (44)
    • ►  February (41)
    • ►  January (46)
  • ▼  2012 (159)
    • ►  December (37)
    • ►  November (50)
    • ▼  October (53)
      • CMS proton-lead ridge: color glass condensate?
      • Was Sandy systemically caused by CO2?
      • Different ways to interpret Feynman diagrams
      • Is Hurricane Sandy unprecedented?
      • Doha, Qatar will host a climate conference
      • Preons probably can't exist
      • Galileo's 1633 trial: a tragic hero
      • Anniversaries: Meitner, van Vleck, Mills, Bohm
      • The holographic principle
      • Evangelista Torricelli: an anniversary
      • PBS Frontline: Climate of Doubt
      • Czech police uncovers a $20 million carbon credit ...
      • Candida: uncertainties, strategies, victories
      • Climate hysteria in presidential debates RIP (1988...
      • Alan Guth on himself, science, cosmology
      • Edward Witten on science, strings, himself
      • Italy earthquake witch trial: 6 years in prison
      • In awe about entanglement
      • Livescribe Smartpen
      • How empty is the black hole interior?
      • Raphael Bousso converts to the Church of Firewall
      • Czech PM ready to veto EU bank supervision
      • Steven Weinberg will not vote for Obama
      • Enthusiasm about the economics Nobel prize: Roth a...
      • Planet with 4 stars found by armchairs astronomers
      • Classification of simple compact Lie groups
      • HadCRUT4: no warming for 16 years
      • Chemists' name for honesty: testosterone
      • Czech regional elections: Pilsen defends some decency
      • EU: a Nobel Peace Prize?
      • Classical physics is sometimes more indeterministi...
      • The Higgs boson observation: Sheldon hires a hottie
      • Kevin Trenberth: too bureaucratic IPCC sucks
      • DNA not long-lived, Jurassic Park claimed unlikely
      • Earth may be cancelling the 2012-2013 El Niño
      • Spread SUSY: wino LSP, displaced vertices, cosmic ...
      • Physics Nobel prize: Haroche and Wineland
      • Supergod challenge: proving a $300 inequality
      • Symbolab: search engine for equations in LaTeX
      • Bohr-Einstein debates: 8 decades later
      • ATLAS: some small multijet excesses
      • Electron's electric quadrupole moment
      • Climate sensitivities in various papers
      • Sheldon Glashow: Does science evolve through blind...
      • Václav Havel Airport Prague: the new name
      • Obama schooled by Romney: why he has no passion
      • Evading quantum mechanics: again
      • SUSY with a colored adjoint chiral multiplet
      • EU bureaucrats' new strategy to close Czech nuclea...
      • Miracles prove the divine power of string theory
      • Higgs: living near the cliff of instability
      • Harvard's divestments: Israel and fossil fuels
      • Nima Arkani-Hamed attracts India to physics
    • ►  September (19)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile