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

563,143 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,
0
6446
2580
00:09
meteorologists saw record-breaking heat waves around the globe,
1
9026
4295
00:13
rampant wildfires in California and Australia,
2
13321
3500
00:16
and the longest run of category 5 tropical cyclones on record.
3
16821
4980
00:21
The number of extreme weather events has been increasing for the last 40 years,
4
21801
4810
00:26
and current predictions suggest that trend will continue.
5
26611
3910
00:30
But are these natural disasters simply bad weather?
6
30521
3500
00:34
Or are they due to our changing climate?
7
34021
3430
00:37
To answer this question
8
37451
1300
00:38
we need to understand the differences between weather and climate—
9
38751
3760
00:42
what they are, how we predict them, and what those predictions can tell us.
10
42511
5511
00:48
Meteorologists define weather as the conditions of the atmosphere
11
48022
4056
00:52
at a particular time and place.
12
52078
2830
00:54
Currently, researchers can predict a region’s weather for the next week
13
54908
3410
00:58
with roughly 80% accuracy.
14
58318
2770
01:01
Climate describes a region’s average atmospheric conditions
15
61088
4397
01:05
over periods of a month or more.
16
65485
3200
01:08
Climate predictions can forecast average temperatures for decades to come,
17
68685
4425
01:13
but they can’t tell us what specific weather events to expect.
18
73110
4609
01:17
These two types of predictions give us such different information
19
77719
4056
01:21
because they’re based on different data.
20
81775
3100
01:24
To forecast weather,
21
84875
1400
01:26
meteorologists need to measure the atmosphere’s initial conditions.
22
86275
4140
01:30
These are the current levels of precipitation, air pressure, humidity,
23
90415
4965
01:35
wind speed and wind direction that determine a region’s weather.
24
95380
4902
01:40
Twice every day, meteorologists from over 800 stations around the globe
25
100282
4781
01:45
release balloons into the atmosphere.
26
105063
2920
01:47
These balloons carry instruments called radiosondes,
27
107983
3940
01:51
which measure initial conditions
28
111923
1521
01:53
and transmit their findings to international weather centers.
29
113444
3840
01:57
Meteorologists then run the data through predictive physics models
30
117284
3730
02:01
that generate the final weather forecast.
31
121014
2940
02:03
Unfortunately, there’s something stopping this global web of data
32
123954
3440
02:07
from producing a perfect prediction:
33
127394
2410
02:09
weather is a fundamentally chaotic system.
34
129804
3690
02:13
This means it’s incredibly sensitive and impossible to perfectly forecast
35
133494
4313
02:17
without absolute knowledge of all the system’s elements.
36
137807
4000
02:21
In a period of just ten days,
37
141807
2100
02:23
even incredibly small disturbances can massively impact atmospheric conditions—
38
143907
6108
02:30
making it impossible to reliably predict weather beyond two weeks.
39
150015
5263
02:35
Climate prediction, on the other hand, is far less turbulent.
40
155278
4000
02:39
This is partly because a region’s climate is, by definition,
41
159278
3220
02:42
the average of all its weather data.
42
162498
2900
02:45
But also because climate forecasts ignore
43
165398
2980
02:48
what’s currently happening in the atmosphere,
44
168378
2490
02:50
and focus on the range of what could happen.
45
170868
3260
02:54
These parameters are known as boundary conditions,
46
174128
3620
02:57
and as their name suggests, they act as constraints on climate and weather.
47
177748
5316
03:03
One example of a boundary condition is solar radiation.
48
183064
4122
03:07
By analyzing the precise distance and angle between a location and the sun,
49
187186
5264
03:12
we can determine the amount of heat that area will receive.
50
192450
3710
03:16
And since we know how the sun behaves throughout the year,
51
196160
3220
03:19
we can accurately predict its effects on temperature.
52
199380
3440
03:22
Averaged across years of data,
53
202820
2430
03:25
this reveals periodic patterns, including seasons.
54
205250
4492
03:29
Most boundary conditions have well-defined values that change slowly, if at all.
55
209742
4951
03:34
This allows researchers to reliably predict climate years into the future.
56
214693
4708
03:39
But here’s where it gets tricky.
57
219401
2340
03:41
Even the slightest change in these boundary conditions
58
221741
2680
03:44
represents a much larger shift for the chaotic weather system.
59
224421
4235
03:48
For example, Earth’s surface temperature has warmed by almost 1 degree Celsius
60
228656
4780
03:53
over the last 150 years.
61
233436
2820
03:56
This might seem like a minor shift,
62
236256
2410
03:58
but this 1-degree change has added the energy equivalent
63
238666
3560
04:02
of roughly one million nuclear warheads into the atmosphere.
64
242226
4678
04:06
This massive surge of energy has already led to a dramatic increase
65
246904
4641
04:11
in the number of heatwaves, droughts, and storm surges.
66
251545
4177
04:15
So, is the increase in extreme weather due to random chance, or changing climate?
67
255722
5929
04:21
The answer is that—
68
261651
1350
04:23
while weather will always be a chaotic system—
69
263001
3440
04:26
shifts in our climate do increase the likelihood of extreme weather events.
70
266441
5341
04:31
Scientists are in near universal agreement that our climate is changing
71
271782
5038
04:36
and that human activity is accelerating those changes.
72
276820
3670
04:40
But fortunately,
73
280490
1400
04:41
we can identify what human behaviors are impacting the climate most
74
281890
4363
04:46
by tracking which boundary conditions are shifting.
75
286253
3260
04:49
So even though next month’s weather might always be a mystery,
76
289513
4327
04:53
we can work together to protect the climate for centuries to come.
77
293840
5280
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7