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AI set to improve job security in the marine survey sector

  AI set to improve job security in the marine survey sector Embracing innovative technologies to meet growing demand   By Richard Dowdeswell, Danny Websdale • February 6, 2024 The data was preprocessed by AI, speeding up post-processing. In a March 2023 blog, Microsoft founder, billionaire entrepreneur and philanthropist Bill Gates said: “The development of AI is as fundamental as the creation of the microprocessor, the personal computer, the internet and the mobile phone. It will change the way people work, learn, travel, get health care and communicate with each other. Entire industries will reorient around it. Businesses will distinguish themselves by how well they use it.”   New workflows that leverage artificial intelligence to achieve the same results as a human being but faster and cheaper will create job losses. From telemarketing to bookkeeping, there really is no stopping the ‘rise of the machines’. Job losses have already happened and there will be many ...

Research vessel finds four new seamounts in high seas

  Research vessel finds four new seamounts in high seas   February 12, 2024 The crew of Schmidt Ocean Institute’s research vessel Falkor (too) recently discovered four underwater mountains – the tallest of which exceeds 2.4km in height – during a January transit from Golfito, Costa Rica, to Valparaiso, Chile, as announced by the organization today. These new seamounts, ranging in size from approximately 1,591 metres to 2,681 metres, supplement the crew’s discovery in November 2023 of an underwater mountain twice the height of the Burj Khalifa, measuring 1,600 metres, in international waters off Guatemala.   Schmidt Ocean Institute experts recently uncovered the largest of four seamounts, towering at 2,681 metres tall, spanning 450 square kilometres, and resting 1,150 metres below the surface. This significant find occurred during a mapping transit from Costa Rica to Chile in January 2024. (Image courtesy: Schmidt Ocean Institute) Using multibeam mapping, Schmidt Ocean...

Changes in the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) and its transport of heat can affect climate and weather patterns, regional sea levels, and ecosystems

Changes in the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) and its transport of heat can affect climate and weather patterns, regional sea levels, and ecosystems! A new study led by Ivenis Pita, a @miamirosenstiel PhD student working at #AOML/ @cimas_rosenstiel, is the first to estimate the AMOC and heat transport at 22.5°S in the South Atlantic.  This study presents a new mapping method based on sustained ocean observations: a high-density expendable bathythermograph (XBT) transect to resolve the strong currents in the western boundary; low density Argo profiling floats across the basin; and satellite sea level data to determine the mapping parameters and errors associated with these estimates. This observing system was named AXMOC (for Argo-XBT-MOC). To learn more, click the link in bio! Photo 1 📸: In situ measurements used in the study. The locations of the Argo and XBT profiles are represented by blue and red dots, respectively. The reference transect at 22....

Much of the U.S. has been experiencing dangerously cold temperatures and winter weather.

A large mass of Arctic air that moved south from Canada brought cold, wintry weather in mid-January 2024 that extended from the Pacific Northwest all the way to the East Coast. The cold reached as far south as Texas and Louisiana. NASA’s Aqua satellite captured this view of snow and clouds over the Great Lakes on Jan. 16, 2024. The map shows near-surface air temperatures at 7 a.m. EST on Jan. 15 from NASA’s Goddard Earth Observing System Model (GEOS), which uses data from NASA satellites and other sources.  Another surge of frigid Arctic air is forecast to spread over the eastern half of the country on January 19 and 20, though it won’t be as extreme according to weather reports. But wait… wasn’t 2023 the hottest year on record? If Earth is experiencing a long-term warming trend, why do these cold events occur?  That’s a matter of weather versus climate. Weather typically refers to short-lived, while climate refers to longer-term averages and usually ov...

NOAA’s GOES West satellite captured this stunning visible imagery of von Kármán vortices

On Jan. 17, 2024, NOAA’s GOES West satellite captured this stunning visible imagery of leaf-shaped actinoform clouds forming next to swirling von Kármán vortices near Guadalupe Island. https://www.instagram.com/reel/C2SzvhfxWuB/?igsh=NTc4MTIwNjQ2YQ== Von Kármán vortices are beautiful swirling cloud formations that typically occur when the prevailing wind is diverted by elevated land features such as islands, mountaintops, or volcanoes. These geological features can disrupt the flow of wind, causing the air, and its subsequent clouds, to rotate into a spiral shape. This is similar to the way large boulders create downstream eddies in rivers. The pattern of the cloud swirls depends on the wind intensity. The vortices are driven by the prevailing winds, which can change seasonally and cause differences in the direction and structure of the vortices. Actinoform clouds are organized in a distinctive radial pattern, often appearing as leaf-like or reminiscent of wagon wheel spoke...

Von Kármán vortex cloud swirls from Jeju Island of Republic of Korea (South Korea)

    This Copernicus Sentinel-3 image acquired on 19 April 2021 shows several vortical cloud patterns swirling downwind south of the Spanish Canary Islands, off the coast of northwestern Africa.   These beautiful spiral clouds, known as Von Kármán vortices, form when atmospheric circulation is disturbed by the presence of mountainous obstacles. The peculiar spiral clouds which can be seen in this image were formed as the wind airflow was deflected by the relief of the Canary Islands. These Von Kármán vortices can be seen extending 400 km southwest due to the strong trade winds that were blowing at the time the image was acquired.   The study of atmospheric phenomena is fundamental to the understanding the fluid dynamics that underly numerous scenarios of our daily lives, from aircraft take-offs to the change in weather conditions. Open data supplied by the Copernicus Sentinel-3 mission are crucial in the advancement of scientific knowledge on cloud dynamic...

Peak summer "greenness" continues to increase across the Arctic tundra, hitting the third-highest peak since 2000

Peak summer "greenness" continues to increase across the Arctic tundra, hitting the third-highest peak since 2000.  #ArcticReportCard2023 The Arctic Report Card for 2023 is here.  - Overall it was the sixth warmest year since records began and the 14th consecutive year temperatures have exceeded the 1991-2020 average.  - This summer was the warmest summer the Arctic has experienced on record. - The Arctic is warming at least two times faster than the rest of the globe in a widely recognized phenomenon known as "Arctic amplification".