Category: Blog

  • Scientists and Clouds

    University of Washington professor Bob Houze takes pictures of clouds at the SPol site.If you observe the typical AMIE/DYNAMO scientist during a day in the Maldives, you’ll find that they are rarely seen without a few key pieces of equipment—a laptop, a USB drive for sharing data, a notebook and pen for jotting notes, and…

  • Weekly Briefing

    Every Wednesday evening, all of the AMIE/DYNAMO/CINDY scientists on site gather in the TV room at the Equator Village hotel. It’s not movie night, but the weekly project briefing. Along with the local scientists, participants call in from various universities and labs in the United States, from the research ships, and from the other observational…

  • Visit to the SPolKa

    The SPolKa radar at the wharf site. The large radar dish is the S-band antenna while the much smaller dish in the lower corner is the K-band antenna. In the right foreground of the image, mounted on the stone platform, is the scanning radiometer.On Wednesday, October 19, I journeyed up the Atoll to see where…

  • Will There Be an MJO This Week?

    The big question on everyone’s mind right now is whether the Madden-Julian Oscillation (MJO) that looked like it was going to occur in the Indian Ocean this week is actually going to happen! This Wheeler-Hendon diagram shows the state of the MJO between September 13 and October 22, 2011. The MJO signal propagates eastward or…

  • AMIE Welcomes Dr. Waheed

    AMIE PI Chuck Long discusses the use of the AMF2 measurements during a site tour with (from left) Head of Gan MMS Ali Waffir, Addu City Mayor Hussen Sodhig, and Maldivian Vice President Dr. Mohamed Waheed. We were delighted to host a recent visit with the Maldivian Vice President, Dr. Mohamed Waheed. The visit went…

  • Changing of the Guard: Sally’s First Day on Gan

    After five different planes and roughly 35 hours of travel, I arrived on Gan on Sunday afternoon, just in time for the first all day rainstorm of the AMIE campaign. I was glad we got some rain to test out the performance of the various instruments, but sorry it made my flight into Gan a…

  • First Look at AMIE Radiosonde Data

    One of the key components of the AMIE campaign is the launch of frequent radiosondes (weather balloons) to explore the evolution of the temperature and moisture fields as the MJO develops over the Indian Ocean and propagates across the Pacific.  A key hypothesis of the campaign is that the deep convection can only organize into…

  • AMIE-Gan Officially Begins

    AMF2 operations officially begin tonight with the start of radiosonde launches at 23:30 UTC, 30 September 2011 (04:30 a.m. local time, 1 October).  A staff of local launchers has been hired for the arduous task of launching eight sondes per day, every day, for the next six months.  Below is a picture of the sonde…

  • Radar Love

    A capacity crowd listens attentively as the ARM radar short course begins.A few days ago, ARM sponsored a short course on millimeter wavelength radar data to kick off the American Meteorological Society’s 35th Conference on Radar Meteorology in Pittsburgh, Penn., this week. About 50 radar enthusiasts took part—mostly young scientists and engineers, but there were…

  • Extra Effort for Extended Facilities

    A few years ago, ARM made the decision to shrink the footprint of the Southern Great Plains (SGP) site to more closely replicate the size of a climate model grid cell (150 x 150 kilometers). This led to a strategy for relocating many of the outlying instrument clusters to new locations within the smaller domain.…