Channel4.com Text Only

[ News  | Homes  | LifeEntertainment  | History  | Science  | Community  | Shop ]
Sport  | Culture  | Cars  | Money  | Broadband  | LearningHealth  | Dating  | Games ]

[ Text Only: Homepage ]
[ Graphical: Channel4 Homepage ]


UK Weather 2008 - Global warming predictions

Predicting Global Warming

Climate models attempt to predict the future. They work like this. Climatologists must first consider umpteen climate variables which play a part in affecting long-term weather patterns (eg variations in the concentration of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, the cloud cover, humidity, how heat energy from the ocean interacts with the atmosphere). These parameters are then fed into a computer model of the atmosphere, built from standard physics principles.

When all the parameters have been entered, the model begins number-crunching, letting every variable interact and 'stew'. The model typically calculates the outcome for a 30-minute interval. But obviously, predicting the climate 30 minutes from now is pretty pointless, so the computer crunches for 30-minute intervals over a longer simulated period of time, typically 30 years. It advances the new data from the last 30-minute run into the next 30-minute run, and so on. Hence the need for powerful computers – a 30-year time period means over half a million 30-minute solutions for every location on the planet! At the end of the simulation, climatologists can analyse what effect occurred over specific areas, known as grids.

Top of page

1. Introduction | Rising Temperatures | Predicting Global Warming | Complicating Factors | Predicting 2080 | Spring 2080 | Summer 2080 | Autumn 2080 | Winter 2080 |10. Quick Guides | 11. Find out more | 12. Credits


Graphical version of this page




[ Text Only: Homepage ]
[ Graphical: Channel4 Homepage ]
[ Contact Us ]
[ Access Advice ]

[ HTML 4.01 TR Approved ]