Tuesday, September 26, 2023

State of the oceans - Sept 26, 2023

 Yeah, the current map is out, a bit late.


The equatorial belt is starting to pull right from the shore.  Cold water will come in, both from the depths, and from the south.


The clouds that make it cold in Tahiti are still there.  The cold water creates the clouds, and then that stops solar heat.  A powerful forcing function, that some would call unstable.  However, if any of these cycles didn't have a return forcing function, we wouldn't be here to discuss it.

Also, I was flashing the 'anomaly' vs. the real temperatures.  I'm not saying anything about 'if wishes were fishes'.


The N. Hemisphere has all the cyclone action.  Rather than caused by excess heat energy, these are all 'cold cyclones' caused by Arctic air.  Soon the NH will be uniformly cold, and the cyclones will stop.  Note how they are rather 'permanent' right now, like the 'Springfield tire fire'.  

When they burn out, we should be back to straight Arctic spills.  I'm fairly certain about the Greenland flow, which will freeze the Thames, but the Canadian flow we've been having all summer may go to Alaska.  

ps 'heat hurricanes' can never stay still.  The practically boil the heat energy out of the water, and must move along the hot water.  No weather person is interested in this mechanics of motion.


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