Earth Changes
On Tuesday, the cold air advancing south from the Arctic chilled the ground so much that one monitoring satellite mistook the ground for tops of clouds, which are usually much colder than surface temperatures. The phenomenon was first pointed out by Washington Post meteorologist Matthew Cappucci.
A similar effect was seen over Canada on February 10, where it was highlighted by the local news channel WROC TV in Rochester, New York.
The satellite in question is called GOES-East. It uses infrared sensors to measure temperatures at the top of clouds to plot them. Typically, the clouds are colder than the ground surface. The satellite's algorithms use this assumption to outline cloud cover from space, even at night.
Capucci tweeted a video illustrating the effect:
He wrote: "in Texas and across the Plains, the extreme cold present means ground temperatures are in the zero to minus-10 [degrees Celsius] range." That is between 32 and 14 degrees Fahrenheit. The average temperature over the past five years in Texas was 48 degrees Fahrenheit, according to a soil temperature map.
The satellite's algorithm then got confused and mistook the temperature of the ground for clouds, plotting them in the blue and purple, the colors usually reserved for clouds.
See here how the cold front could be seen coming down from Canada on February 16:
The extreme weather is causing havoc across the US.
The cold is affecting 30 states, and in some places, temperatures are 50 degrees lower than usual, the Washington Post reported on Tuesday. Record low temperature have been recorded in several cities, including Sioux Falls in South Dakota, Sky News reported.
A local here demonstrates how cold it is by throwing a hot liquid into the air, which instantly freezes:
A surge in demand for electricity in Texas has lead to powers cuts, leaving more than 2.8 million people without power on Monday, Insider's Bill Bostock, Aylin Woodward, and Kelly McLaughlin reported.
President Joe Biden declared a state of emergency in Texas on Sunday.
An energy emergency has been declared and 14 states in the US are facing rolling blackouts.
At least 20 deaths have been attributed to the cold snap so far.
The current conditions in Texas could be in part due to Arctic warming due to climate change, Judah Cohen, the director of seasonal forecasting at Atmospheric and Environmental Research, told The Guardian on Wednesday.
Reader Comments
Usurping, fakeRCPpresident JoeBidenBribem declared a state of emergency in Texas on Sunday.
Reporters. At the bottom of the professional pool we have politicians, then teachers, then reporters, ascending in perspicacity.
The assumption in the algorithm was made by a programmer. Simple machines, not alive, not thinking, cannot be "confused."
In the world of programming, this should be called The Ferguson Effect .
In the world of programming, this should be called The Ferguson Effect .Indeed, even The Ferguson Gambit...
I bet that you can adjust your posts to closer to 'normal' and it would help big time.
RC
yeah, I like it when I can tell them what to do.. I do not like it when they talk back to me. why did you think that was not possible?
I consider a 'computer' to be a ' chip' as in a configurable relay assembly.
if you do not understand control logic, you should probably flip the fan switch. from auto to on. if the fan comes on.. you have both high and low voltage power. (the indoor fan is also good to go)
alt-J - Left Hand Free (Official Video) 1 - YouTube
Comment: See also: Record cold in eleven U.S. states - coldest February 16 in history of meteorological observations