Is the weather actually becoming more extreme? - R. Saravanan

559,678 views ・ 2020-08-25

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

Translator: Reviewer: Daban Q. Jaff
00:06
From 2016 to 2019,
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meteorologists saw record-breaking heat waves around the globe,
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rampant wildfires in California and Australia,
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and the longest run of category 5 tropical cyclones on record.
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The number of extreme weather events has been increasing for the last 40 years,
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and current predictions suggest that trend will continue.
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But are these natural disasters simply bad weather?
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Or are they due to our changing climate?
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To answer this question
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we need to understand the differences between weather and climate—
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what they are, how we predict them, and what those predictions can tell us.
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Meteorologists define weather as the conditions of the atmosphere
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at a particular time and place.
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Currently, researchers can predict a region’s weather for the next week
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with roughly 80% accuracy.
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Climate describes a region’s average atmospheric conditions
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over periods of a month or more.
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Climate predictions can forecast average temperatures for decades to come,
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but they can’t tell us what specific weather events to expect.
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These two types of predictions give us such different information
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because they’re based on different data.
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To forecast weather,
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meteorologists need to measure the atmosphere’s initial conditions.
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These are the current levels of precipitation, air pressure, humidity,
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wind speed and wind direction that determine a region’s weather.
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Twice every day, meteorologists from over 800 stations around the globe
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release balloons into the atmosphere.
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These balloons carry instruments called radiosondes,
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which measure initial conditions
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and transmit their findings to international weather centers.
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Meteorologists then run the data through predictive physics models
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that generate the final weather forecast.
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Unfortunately, there’s something stopping this global web of data
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from producing a perfect prediction:
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weather is a fundamentally chaotic system.
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This means it’s incredibly sensitive and impossible to perfectly forecast
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without absolute knowledge of all the system’s elements.
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In a period of just ten days,
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even incredibly small disturbances can massively impact atmospheric conditions—
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making it impossible to reliably predict weather beyond two weeks.
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Climate prediction, on the other hand, is far less turbulent.
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This is partly because a region’s climate is, by definition,
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the average of all its weather data.
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But also because climate forecasts ignore
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what’s currently happening in the atmosphere,
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and focus on the range of what could happen.
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These parameters are known as boundary conditions,
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and as their name suggests, they act as constraints on climate and weather.
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One example of a boundary condition is solar radiation.
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By analyzing the precise distance and angle between a location and the sun,
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we can determine the amount of heat that area will receive.
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And since we know how the sun behaves throughout the year,
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we can accurately predict its effects on temperature.
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Averaged across years of data,
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this reveals periodic patterns, including seasons.
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Most boundary conditions have well-defined values that change slowly, if at all.
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This allows researchers to reliably predict climate years into the future.
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But here’s where it gets tricky.
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Even the slightest change in these boundary conditions
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represents a much larger shift for the chaotic weather system.
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For example, Earth’s surface temperature has warmed by almost 1 degree Celsius
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over the last 150 years.
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This might seem like a minor shift,
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but this 1-degree change has added the energy equivalent
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of roughly one million nuclear warheads into the atmosphere.
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This massive surge of energy has already led to a dramatic increase
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in the number of heatwaves, droughts, and storm surges.
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So, is the increase in extreme weather due to random chance, or changing climate?
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The answer is that—
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while weather will always be a chaotic system—
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shifts in our climate do increase the likelihood of extreme weather events.
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Scientists are in near universal agreement that our climate is changing
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and that human activity is accelerating those changes.
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But fortunately,
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we can identify what human behaviors are impacting the climate most
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by tracking which boundary conditions are shifting.
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So even though next month’s weather might always be a mystery,
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we can work together to protect the climate for centuries to come.
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