Monthly Archives: August 2006

With the outgoing, and the incoming

Impressive reporting by Michael Totten, on the Israeli-Lebanon border, with many good photos of what this mobile artillery base is like and why some IDF spokesmen are upbeat, almost sanguine.

“Has anything been permanently accomplished up there?” I said.

“Some things, yes,” he said. “We destroyed a lot of their infrastructure. They had more weapons and more underground bunkers and tunnels than we had any idea. People coming out of there say it’s vast.”

But not much looks hopeful in Lisa Goldman’s report from "the shooting gallery." 

Dewpoint 101

Bob Rose, chief meteorologist for the Lower Colorado River Authority, says we need to know our dewpoint number to understand humidity.

"Basically, anytime the dewpoint gets in the 60s, or higher, the air is going to feel pretty humid.  And the closer the air temperature and dewpoint readings are, the more humid the air will be."

Bob and Troy Kimmel, a lecturer in meteorology at the Univervsity of Texas, aren’t pleased that Houston’s KPRC-TV forecasters have decided to stop mentioning the dewpoint on the air–although the number still is available on the station’s web site. Troy, who forecasts for KVET/KASE/KMFK radio in Austin, as well as teaching meteorology, offers this lesson on dewpoint.

          —— 

To teach a little (after all that’s what I do!!), dewpoint temperature is the temperature you would have to cool the air to, at a constant pressure and water vapor content, in order for that air to become saturated (in other words for the relative humidity to reach 100% in the layer of air being monitored). In our atmosphere, the air temperature can never cool below the air’s dewpoint temperature.

Dewpoint temperature is a accurate measurement of the amount of moisture in the air. Relative humidity, on the other hand, is the ratio of the amount of moisture in the air compared to how much moisture could coexist in the air at that given temperature.The closer the air temperature and the dewpoint temperature are together, the higher the relative humidity.

Relative humidity only tells you how close to saturation you are, not how much moisture is present in the monitored layer of air. Relative humidity is always expressed as a percentage (%) and cannot be computed exactly without the use of psychrometric calculators and tables (although, again, it can be estimated by looking to see how close or far apart the air temperature and dewpoint temperature is).

A couple of other things to remember when discussing humidity:

– A 100% relative humidity does not necessarily mean rain. It simply
means the atmosphere is saturated. Clouds may form, but most clouds do not produce precipitation.

– The colder the air temperature, the less atmospheric moisture that can
coexist in that air. The warmer the air, the greater the amount of atmospheric moisture can coexist in the air.

Here’s a quick brain teaser that I use in my classes. Review these examples:

Example #1:  Air Temperature…. 90 F     Dewpoint Temperature…. 72 F
Example #2:  Air Temperature…. 18 F     Dewpoint Temperature…. 17 F
Example #3:  Air Temperature…. 65 F     Dewpoint Temperature…. 30 F
Example #4:  Air Temperature…. 40 F     Dewpoint Temperature…. 35 F
Example #5:  Air Temperature…. 100 F   Dewpoint Temperature…. 15 F

In which of these examples would the amount of moisture be greatest in
the part of the atmosphere being monitored?

In which of these examples would the amount of moisture be lowest in the
part of the atmosphere being monitored?

In which of these examples would the relative humidity be the highest?

In which of these examples would the relative humidity be the least?"

(Answers below – don’t scroll below until you want to see answers!!)

Troy M. Kimmel, Jr.
Lecturer and Manager, Weather and Climate Resource Center,
     Department of Geography and the Environment,
     University of Texas at Austin

Answers:

Moisture greatest? Example #1 (highest dewpoint temperature)

Moisture lowest? Example #5 (lowest dewpoint temperature)

Relative humidity highest? Example #2 (the air temperature / dewpoint temperature spread is the least; even though the relative humidity is highest, the amount of moisture coexisting in the air is relative low because the air temperature is low)

Relative humidity lowest? Example #5 (the air temperature / dewpoint temperature spread is greatest)

Cease fire for a while

The Israeli bunker blogger is back with a long piece with a lot of common sense and so its conclusion is particularly saddening. Here’s part of it:

"A cease fire now means nothing but a breather. It’s a chance for aid to reach civilians in Lebanon, it’s strange how nobody is talking about aid for Israeli civilians. The northern towns are mostly poor, this past month the north of the country was basically shut down, people can’t work and so can’t afford to buy food, some can’t go out of the bunker for the food, it’s not dissimilar, perhaps it’s on a smaller scale, but nobody even mentioned it."

Enough about terrorism, let’s talk football

That Texas favorite, former Longhorns QB Vince Young, reportedly is set to quarterback the second and third quarters of tonight’s preseason opener Titans vs Saints game in Nashville. Mr. Boy and Mom are visiting friends in Houston for the weekend, but I know he’ll interested to hear how well his hero did on his first outing since the Rose Bowl. I can’t find any tv listing, but I guess espn.com will be the place to keep up with it.

UPDATE  Titans Radio in Nashville scores it a Saints win 19 to 16 and makes Vince’s turn sound less than impressive and even worrisome:

"Rookie quarterback Vince Young made his NFL debut midway through the second quarter and received a loud reception from the fans at LP Field. Young played throughout the entire third quarter and exited during the fourth after spraining his ankle on a scramble in the red zone."

The Austin American-Statesman has a fine picture of our hero and this much more, along with Vince’s poor stats of only 4 for 11 for 56 yards:

"Young was scrambling to his left and was tackled while throwing into the end zone. He remained down on the field, clutching his left ankle. He was subsequently removed from the game.

"The Titans told the NFL Network that Young’s injury is a sprained ankle and the training staff said the team’s prized rookie will be fine."

Ouch. That never happened when he was a Longhorn.

The advance before the retreat

Many Israeli bloggers are upset about the ceasefire, which apparently will not begin until Monday, while the IDF is swarming southern Lebanon all the way to the Litani River, including in their biggest helicopter airlift in thirty years. But some like this Israeli doctor just reel from the confusion of it all:

"Talking to friends. Again news on TV confusion. I cannot study, read, love. Life as (I) know it stopped a month ago."

While Meryl Yourish finds some good in the UN resolution, even if she only gives it a D+.

"Israel managed to get the UN to do to the Arabs what the Arabs have been doing to Israel for decades. How does it feel, buddy? I think it’s great….The morning was ‘quiet‘—Ynet’s phrase that means ‘no rockets were fired on Israeli civilians’—and the afternoon heated things up. But not by a lot. Gee. The ground forces are stopping the rocket fire. Who’da thunk?"

She also has a link to a Jerusalem Post copy of the full UN resolution.

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DryBones.JPG

Mars and the full moon

Folks planning to heed the email making the rounds about the spectacular sky show Aug. 27 should plan to do something else. Alas, Mars will really not be the size of the full moon.

It might be, if the dusty red planet broke out of its orbit and came wandering our way, in which case its gravity would play hell with the tides, and make coastal living, at the least, unpleasant.

More likely, Mars will continue in its usual orbit, and from here on water world it will be just a pinpoint of light, a flashing little star, because it’s never closer to us than 35 million miles away.