Title: Regional Model Studies of African Wave Disturbances
1Regional Model Studies of African Wave
Disturbances
- August 1, 2005
- Charles Sosa, SHARP Apprentice
- Leonard Druyan, Senior Research Scientist
- Matthew Fulakeza, Associate Research Scientist
- Goddard Institute for Space Studies
- 112th Street Broadway 2880
- New York, New York 10025
2Introduction
- The research done here at the Goddard Institute
for Space Studies is priceless work that is
highly acknowledged and valued throughout the
world. At Goddard we not only focus our time and
effort on space studies. Studying meteorological
events throughout the globe such as climate
changes and global warming are also a major part
of the work done here at GISS.
3Introduction
- As a part of NASA SHARP, I was chosen to study
with Drs. Len Druyan and Dr. Mathew Fulakeza,
both of whom are research scientists at GISS.
Dr. Druyan and Dr. Fulakeza have been researching
African Wave Disturbances and the validation of
Regional Models for some time so I am very
fortunate to be working with them. Since the
first day of the NASA SHARP I found this topic
very interesting. I have Len and Matthew to
thank for that.
4Introduction
-
- The following presentation is a look at the
issue at hand, what I have completed thus far in
NASA SHARP and what is to come. I hope all of
you enjoy it. Thank you.
5Amina is so starved she cannot eat even if she
wants to. She vomits as soon as I give her food
or water, her mother said. As far as Im
concerned God did not make us all equal - I mean,
look at us all here. None of us have enough food
to survive
-BBC News, Hillary Anderson
July 20, 2005
One mothers opinions and views on life as a
result of the devastating famine and poverty
experienced frequently in regions such as Niger
and Sahel.
This case is not unique.
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7Famine, Poverty and Devastation
- The worlds hungriest continent reels under a
new famine that killed an estimated quarter of a
million people in West Africa in the early 70s
Food production has increased 1 a year, while
its population has grown nearly three times as
quickly, from an estimated 350 million to 470
million. - -Time Magazine
- July 1980
8Famine, Poverty and Devastation
- To this day the devastating changes in the
African climate are crippling what is left of
agriculture specifically in the western regions
of the continent. Famine is sparked by the
climate changes and also due to civil wars. An
estimated 75 million died from famine between the
years 1900-2004, this includes women, men,
children and infants. The problems persist up
until this day, developing patterns depending on
the month of the year. - During the period of time between July through
August, rain is present in West Africa. Over the
past few years, this has not been the case.
These storms are also known as African Wave
Disturbances. This time period is also known as
the Rainy Season. Unfortunately in some parts of
West Africa, the rain fall brings harmful
diseases such as malaria that kills many. - http//www.geocites.com/dtmcbride/hist/disaste
rs-war.html
9Rainy Season of West Africa
10Region of StudyLatitude -20.00 º S to
35.00 º NLongitude -35.00 º W to 35.00 º E
11The Problem
- The African Centre of Meteorological Applications
for Development, otherwise known as ACMAD, is
stationed in Niamey, Niger. The computer on
which they gather data sources from European
climate centers, runs on a Windows Platform with
128mb of random access memory (RAM). However,
128mb of RAM is not enough to run any type of
meteorological applications. Relying on data
sources different from their own, which cannot
predict how the Rainy Seasons of West Africa will
impact how well disastrous conditions are worked
out. By knowing this information ahead of time,
the loss of life would be prevented by getting
the United Nations and Red Cross involved to aid
people suffering from such droughts. - Len Druyan and Mathew Fulakeza are working on
getting the RM-3 with a new computer to ACMAD.
12The Proposed Solution
- The use of a Regional Model to act as the
backbone for the continuous re-development of
countries in West Africa, shattered by the
devastating loss of life and agriculture over the
past few decades. - What is a Regional Model?
- Regional Models such as the ones here at
Goddard, are UNIX based computer programs that
run best on Macintosh computers through X11 and
Terminal. Using NCEP Reanalysis Data sets as a
starting point, and GCM (Global Climate Model) as
boundary conditions, they are able to simulate
the climate at any given point in history, now
and in the future, even taking into consideration
global warming.
13The Proposed Solution
- Here at Goddard, there are two versions of the
model The 15 Layer and the 28 layer. Both yield
relatively the same data with some minor
differences. However, they differ greatly in the
amount of time it takes to run a simulation. For
this research, the 28 Layer model was used. - 15 LAYER MODEL
- - Takes almost half as long to run simulations
and covers less atmospheric pressure layers ( 15
layers ) - 28 LAYER MODEL
- - Takes almost twice as long to run simulations
and covers more atmospheric pressure layers ( 28
layers )
14Plotting RM-3 Data
- Once the selected simulation dates finish, one
must take the data it produces (usually in a
Binary Form) and copy it over to a program called
Transform. This program also runs on Macintosh,
but only in the Classic OS 9.2 Environment. - By plotting the data, you can then take TRMM
(Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission) Satellite
images of the same time period that you told the
RM-3 to simulate. By doing so, you can see what
the simulation model said happened, as apposed to
what actually happened with the TRMM.
15Regional Model 28 Layer August 1 - 31, 2003,
West Africa
16TRMM Satellite Image of Accumulated Rainfall
Aug 1 - 31, 2003, West Africa
17Comparing the RM-3 vs. the TRMM
RM3 -Shows more rainfall -Less concentrated
rainfall
TRMM -Shows less rainfall (ocean) -More
concentrated rainfall
18DiffRM-3 - TRMM Error / Difference
19Conclusion
- Millions of people are suffering in West Africa
from a number of serious problems ranging from
civil wars, to genocide, famine, and aids. It is
important to tackle these problems one at a time,
one region at a time. The use of a Regional
Model at ACMAD can benefit West Africa
tremendously with regard to famine and droughts.
These simulations that take about a few hours,
possibly days to run, can determine how the next
few months would turn out, giving West Africa the
upper hand in the fight against Famine and
Drought. - I would like to thank Senior Scientist, Leonard
Druyan and Associate Scientist, Matthew Fulakeza
for their encouragement and support and I look
forward to completing NASA SHARP with more RM-3
plot validations to prove that it truly works to
the intended audience for the reminding weeks of
the NASA SHARP Program. Thank you. - Special thanks to Frank Scalzo, Elizabeth
Rudolph, Mr. Ruben Worrell, Ms. Linda Cornett,
Dr. Barba, Mr. Otto Marte, Mr. Luis Villada, Mr.
Victor Flores, Dr. Yiannis Andreopoulos, and
finally Michael Shospin and Sabrina Hosein for
all their help and tech support. Again, Thank
you.
20References TRMM - Information and
BackgroundTRMM - Information and
Backgroundhttp//trmm.gsfc.nasa.gov/ TRMM -
Daily Satellite Precipitation Data http//lake.nas
com.nasa.gov/tovas/3B42/index2_V5.shtml NCEP
Reanalysis - Wind Data http//www.cdc.noaa.gov/cdc
/data.ncep.reanalysis.html Project Science Brief
Introduction to Topic http//www.giss.nasa.gov/res
earch/briefs/druyan_06/
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