The Weather Machine
How We See Into the Future
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- £6.99
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- £6.99
Publisher Description
‘Revelatory … convey[s] the technical brilliance and political significance of an achievement that hides in plain sight’
Telegraph
From satellites circling the Earth, to weather stations far out in the ocean, through some of the most ingenious minds and advanced algorithms at work today - In this gripping investigation, Andrew Blum takes us on a global journey. Our destination: the simulated models weather scientists have constructed of our planet, which spin faster than time, turning chaos into prediction, offering glimpses of our future with eerie precision.
This collaborative invention spans the Earth and relies on continuous co-operation between all nations – a triumph of human ingenuity and diplomacy we too often shrug off as a tool for choosing the right footwear each morning. But in this new era of extreme weather, we may come to rely on its maintenance and survival for our own.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Meteorology is "a wonder we treat as a banality," argues journalist Blum (Tubes: A Journey to the Center of the Internet) in his deep dive into the field's evolution. While humanity had long struggled to predict weather with some degree of accuracy, it wasn't possible until the telegraph's mid-19th-century arrival. The ability to recognize and share timely information led to a better understanding of weather patterns, first on a continent-wide and eventually on a global scale. This, along with a few happy accidents and some really tough math, led to the development and refinement of the systems which people know and complain about today. Excursions to forecasting labs and weather stations around the world, along with interviews with behind-the-scenes scientists, fill in the blanks, while asides on the political ramifications of weather satellites and global forecasting and on Thomas Jefferson's early forays into forecasting add depth and intrigue. Thanks to Blum's immersive research, readers will come away with a greater appreciation for the hard work that goes into something often taken for granted.