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Number 518 #3, December 22, 2000 by Phil Schewe, James Riordon, and Ben Stein

A Green Ocean in Brazil

Using a sophisticated version of weather radar imaging, scientists have now been able to track the movement of rainstorms and even to measure the amount of rainfall released, and from which altitudes. At the AGU meeting members of the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRIM) reported the most precise rain maps ever achieved for the region within 38 degrees latitude north and south of the equator, a zone crucial to worldwide weather because of its vast ocean currents, rain forests, and the huge amount of solar radiation falling there.

Daniel Rosenfeld of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem said that when air over the Amazon rainforest was clean, storms there unexpectedly rivaled those over the ocean in the amount of rainfall. In other words, Brazil was acting more like a "green ocean" than like a continental land mass. Rosenfeld explained that although some particulate matter is useful for seeding raindrops, when too many fine particles are present (from wood fires, say) then water droplets are actually inhibited from forming into drops large enough to precipitate. Brazil then, at least during a period of very clear air, could approximate the conditions over the ocean (TRIM website ).


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