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Wednesday, May 31, 2017

JPL News - Day in Review

 

DAY IN REVIEW
NASA JPL latest news release
New Light on the Future of a Key Antarctic Glacier

Study Shows Thwaites Glacier's Ice Loss May Not Progress as Quickly as Thought

The melt rate of West Antarctica's Thwaites Glacier is an important concern, because this glacier alone is currently responsible for about 1 percent of global sea level rise. A new NASA study finds that Thwaites' ice loss will continue, but not quite as rapidly as previous studies have estimated.

The new study, published in the journal Geophysical Research Letters, finds that numerical models used in previous studies have overestimated how rapidly ocean water is able to melt the glacier from below, leading them to overestimate the glacier's total ice loss over the next 50 years by about 7 percent.

Thwaites Glacier covers an area nearly as large as the state of Washington (70,000 square miles, or 182,000 square kilometers). Satellite measurements show that its rate of ice loss has doubled since the 1990s. The glacier has the potential to add several inches to global sea levels.

The new study is led by Helene Seroussi, a scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California. It is the first to combine two computer models, one of the Antarctic ice sheet and one of the Southern Ocean, in such a way that the models interact and evolve together throughout an experiment -- creating what scientists call a coupled model.

Previous modeling studies of the glacier used only an ice sheet model, with the effects of the ocean specified beforehand and unchanging.

Seroussi and colleagues at JPL and the University of California at Irvine (UCI) used an ocean model developed at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge with an ice sheet model developed at JPL and UCI. They used data from NASA's Operation Icebridge and other airborne and satellite observations, both to set up the numerical model simulations and to check how well the models reproduced observed changes.

Glaciers have beds just as rivers do, and most glacier beds slope downhill in the same direction the glacier is flowing, as a riverbed does. Thwaites Glacier's bed does the opposite: it slopes uphill in the direction of flow. The bedrock under the glacier's ocean front is higher than bedrock farther inland, which has been pushed down over the millennia by its heavy burden of ice.

Thwaites has lost so much ice that it floats where it used to be attached to bedrock. That has opened a passageway underneath the glacier where ocean water can seep in.

In this part of Antarctica, the warm, salty, deep ocean current that circles the continent comes near land, and warm water can flow onto the continental shelf. This warm seawater now seeps beneath Thwaites Glacier, melting it from below.

As the glacier continues to melt, grow thinner and float off bedrock farther and farther inland, new cavities will continue to open up. Because the bedrock slopes downhill, there's no natural barrier to stop this process. Earlier modeling studies assumed that water in the new cavities would continue to melt the glacial underside at the same rate that it's melting now.

Seroussi's coupled model found that water circulation is more restricted in these narrow spaces, and as a result, the water will melt the ice more slowly than previously thought.

Seroussi noted that critical factors affecting Thwaites, such as how nearby ocean temperatures will change, are still unknown and represented by different scenarios in different studies. However, "Our results shift the estimates for sea level rise to smaller numbers regardless of the scenario," she said.

The study is titled "Continued retreat of Thwaites Glacier, West Antarctica, controlled by bed topography and ocean circulation."

 

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NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory
NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory
4800 Oak Grove Dr
Pasadena, CA 91109

Tuesday, May 30, 2017

Kursus Saham Bursa Malaysia & WallStreet (CFD) - RM69! (Warant, REIT, Analisa Teknikal, CFD: Facebook, Intel, Google...)


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4. Sabah : Hotel Pulau Labuan 2.  ( Peta )
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2. Australia : Melbourne Airport Hotel
3. Brunei : Airport Hotel
4. Singapore : Airport Hotel
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6. Arab Saudi : Jeddah Airport Hotel
6. Korea : Seoul Airport Hotel
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JPL News - Day in Review

 

DAY IN REVIEW
High-Silica 'Halos' Shed Light on Wet Ancient Mars
Pale "halos" around fractures in bedrock analyzed by NASA's Curiosity Mars rover contain copious silica, indicating that ancient Mars had liquid water for a long time.
› Read the full story
Cassini Finds Saturn Moon May Have Tipped Over
Saturn's icy, ocean-bearing moon Enceladus may have tipped over in the distant past, according to recent research from NASA's Cassini mission.
› Read the full story

 

This message sent to chantybanty1.chanti@blogger.com from jplnewsroom@jpl.nasa.gov

NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory
NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory
4800 Oak Grove Dr
Pasadena, CA 91109

Monday, May 29, 2017

Khidmat Mencari Jodoh Untuk Wanita - www.CariJodohClub.co.nr

 
Adakah anda masih mencari-cari calon jodoh   anda? malu untuk mencari pasangan idaman secara terbuka? 
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dan berkenalan dengan ahli-ahli Kelab yang juga sedang mencari Jodoh.


Perkhidmatan mencari jodoh ini terbuka ke seluruh Malaysia :
Johor, Kedah, Kuala Lumpur, Melaka, N. Sembilan, Pahang, Perak,   Perlis, Sabah, Sarawak, Selangor, Terenganu, Pulau Pinang, Labuan,   Cyberjaya, Putrajaya dan Kelantan,
 
 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
~ Daripada Mu'awiyah al-Qusyairi katanya, Rasulullah SAW bersabda yang maksudnya: "Ketahuilah orang yang hadir hendaklah menyampaikan kepada orang yang tidak hadir."

(al-Bukhari Muslim dan Ibnu Majah,)

...mungkin ada kenalan anda sedang mencari Info dalam emel ini, mengapa tidak kongsi  dengan mereka? menerusi.. Gmail / Myspace / Facebook / YM / Twitter.

Sunday, May 28, 2017

Mencari Cikgu Tuisyen SPM & UPSR @ Butterworth & Shah Alam

 
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Berminat? maklumat lanjut disini >> http://majalah30.blogspot.com/p/blog-page_17.html



.

Thursday, May 25, 2017

JPL News - Day in Review

 

DAY IN REVIEW
A Whole New Jupiter: First Science Results from NASA's Juno Mission
Early results from NASA's Juno mission to Jupiter portray the largest planet in our solar system as a complex, gigantic, turbulent world.
› Read the full story
NASA Discovers a New Mode of Ice Loss in Greenland
A NASA study finds during Greenland's two hottest summers on record, ice in Rink Glacier didn't just melt faster, it slid through the glacier's interior in a gigantic wave.
› Read the full story
Collapsing Star Gives Birth to a Black Hole
Astronomers have watched as a massive, dying star was likely reborn as a black hole.
› Read the full story

 

This message sent to chantybanty1.chanti@blogger.com from jplnewsroom@jpl.nasa.gov

NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory
NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory
4800 Oak Grove Dr
Pasadena, CA 91109

Wednesday, May 24, 2017

JPL News - Day in Review

 

DAY IN REVIEW
NASA Moves Up Launch of Psyche Mission to a Metal Asteroid
Psyche, NASA's mission to a unique metal asteroid, has moved up one year, with launch in the summer of 2022, and a planned arrival at the main belt asteroid in 2026.
› Read the full story
Cassini Looks on as Solstice Arrives at Saturn
NASA's veteran Cassini spacecraft has reached a new milestone as of today: Saturnian solstice.
› Read the full story

 

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NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory
NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory
4800 Oak Grove Dr
Pasadena, CA 91109

IMG_7010.pdf

Tuesday, May 23, 2017

Invoice(90-0775)

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Monday, May 22, 2017

JPL News - Day in Review

 

DAY IN REVIEW
Astronomers Confirm Orbital Details of TRAPPIST-1h
Astronomers used NASA's Kepler space telescope to confirm the orbital period of the outermost TRAPPIST-1 planet.
› Read the full story
NASA to Discuss First Science Results from Juno Jupiter Mission
Scientists from NASA's Juno mission to Jupiter will discuss their first in-depth science results in a media telecon at 11 a.m. PDT (2 p.m. EDT) Thursday, May 25.
› Read the full story
NASA to Discuss FY2018 Budget Proposal, Provide Virtual Tours of Centers
NASA will hold a series of events Tuesday, May 23, highlighting the agency's Fiscal Year 2018 budget proposal.
› Read the full story

 

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NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory
4800 Oak Grove Dr
Pasadena, CA 91109

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Thursday, May 18, 2017

JPL News - Day in Review

 

DAY IN REVIEW
NASA JPL latest news release
NASA's CPEX Tackles a Weather Fundamental

A NASA-funded field campaign getting underway in Florida on May 25 has a real shot at improving meteorologists' ability to answer some of the most fundamental questions about weather: Where will it rain? When? How much?

Called the Convective Processes Experiment (CPEX), the campaign is using NASA's DC-8 airborne laboratory outfitted with five complementary research instruments designed and developed at NASA. The plane also will carry small sensors called dropsondes that are dropped from the plane and make measurements as they fall. Working together, the instruments will collect detailed data on wind, temperature and humidity in the air below the plane during the birth, growth and decay of convective clouds -- clouds formed by warm, moist air rising off the subtropical waters around Florida.

"Convection is simply a column or bubble of warm air rising," said CPEX Principal Investigator Ed Zipser of the University of Utah in Salt Lake City. That rising air may become the seed of a rainstorm; in the tropics and subtropics, including the U.S. South, convection is the most common way for precipitation to form. Convective clouds can join together to form a major rainstorm or can even become a hurricane.

Even though convection is such a fundamental atmospheric process, the start of convection has proven difficult to predict. Bjorn Lambrigtsen of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, a member of the CPEX science team, explained why: "Tropical convection flares up quickly. A thunderstorm pops up, does its thing, and goes away in an hour or so. And they're not very large." They're typically less than six miles (10 kilometers) across. Satellites can't observe much detail about a feature that small even if they happen to be looking at the right place at the right time. "To understand what makes a thunderstorm form and grow, we need field campaigns. We need to fly to where the storms are, look at them and their environment in detail, and measure all the important features at the same time," said Lambrigtsen.

Zipser is particularly interested in areas of deep convection, with cloud tops higher than jets fly. "If you look at a vacation poster of Hawaii, you see a sky full of little cotton balls," he says. "Those clouds are only a few kilometers deep, and you might get a light shower out of them. The troposphere over the tropics is 14 or 15 kilometers [9 miles] deep, and the top half of deep convective clouds is full of ice particles instead of liquid drops. If these deep clouds become better organized, grow into a large system and move over land, you can have widespread, heavy rainfall for the better part of a day. We need to find out when deep convection is going to form and why."

One Month, One Plane, Five Instruments

The CPEX team plans to log 10 to 16 flights in June for a total of about 100 flight hours, weather permitting. They hope to record the entire evolution of convective storms, from birth to decay. They'll fly in whichever direction the weather seems most promising, whether it's the Gulf of Mexico, the Caribbean or the western Atlantic Ocean. The most interesting data should come when the plane is able to penetrate deep but moderate convection without the threat of lightning, collecting data from inside a storm or storm system.

The five NASA instruments are flying together as a group for the first time:

  • DAWN, the Doppler Aerosol Wind Lidar, is a relatively new addition to NASA's Earth science toolkit that measures the horizontal wind profile below the plane. It was developed and is operated by NASA's Langley Research Center in Hampton, Virginia. Lambrigtsen noted that in contrast with dropsondes, which collect data only from the spots where they're dropped, DAWN collects a swath of continuous data along the flight path. "It's one of the most important measurements for understanding tropical convection, and it was not available till DAWN and similar sensors came on the scene," Lambrigtsen said.
  • APR-2, the Airborne Second-Generation Precipitation Radar, measures precipitation and vertical motion within storms using the same kind of dual-polarization, dual-Doppler technology as the National Weather Service's ground-based radar. Developed and operated by JPL, APR-2 measures the rain or ice particles in a cloud, which reveal the cloud's structure.
  • Three microwave radiometers from JPL measure what Lambrigtsen calls "the bread and butter of convection" -- temperature, water vapor, and the amount of liquid in clouds:
    • HAMSR, the High Altitude MMIC (Monolithic Microwave integrated Circuit) Sounding Radiometer;
    • MTHP, the Microwave Temperature and Humidity Profiler
    • MASC, the Microwave Atmospheric Sounder for Cubesats. This experimental instrument will test the possibility of flying a miniaturized microwave radiometer on a tiny satellite called a Cubesat. JPL scientists will assess MASC's performance in CPEX to advance the instrument along the path to space readiness.

The DC-8 aircraft and crew are based at NASA's Armstrong Flight Research Center in Palmdale, California.

Better Understanding, Improved Models

With a career stretching back to the 1960s, Ed Zipser knows as well as anyone how a good data set from field research can advance understanding of the atmosphere and improve the accuracy of weather and climate models. "We've known since the 1970s that the key to a successful forecast is being able to understand and treat the role of convection," he said. "We've made a lot of progress, but none of the model treatments of convection is anything you could call perfect. We need to observe better and understand more. CPEX is a pretty exciting opportunity to learn more about convection and its evolution."

 

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NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory
NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory
4800 Oak Grove Dr
Pasadena, CA 91109