Weather Systems photograph

Weather Systems

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Artists Andrew Bird
Release dateApril 1, 2003
ProducersMark Nevers
LabelsWegawam Music Co.
GenresIndie Folk
Baroque Pop
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID3049004
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About Weather Systems


Weather Systems, released in 2003, is Andrew Bird's second solo album and his first after disbanding Bowl of Fire. Bird has said that the album was simply a side project during his four or five year recording of Andrew Bird & the Mysterious Production of Eggs.

Why weather in games is getting more realistic

Why weather in games is getting more realistic
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... Flagship Xbox exclusive Forza Motorsport made a big deal of advertising its complex Weather Systems when it launched its latest instalment earlier this year...

AI could predict hurricane landfall sooner - report

AI could predict hurricane landfall sooner - report
Nov 14,2023 10:31 am

... The way extreme Weather Systems evolve may also be changing...

The slow and delicate aircraft taking on spy missions

The slow and delicate aircraft taking on spy missions
Sep 28,2023 10:51 pm

... Clambering to its stratospheric destination at a lazy 55 mph the machine can travel backwards in relation to the earth if it hits winds of higher velocity as it noses upwards through Weather Systems...

Climate change played major role in Libya floods

Climate change played major role in Libya floods
Sep 19,2023 11:51 am

... But they are confident climate change played a significant role, because there is very strong evidence higher temperatures lead to heavier rainfall and other studies have shown climate change increases the intensity of Weather Systems such as Storm Daniel...

Hopes for summer weather before autumn starts? - BBC Weather

Hopes for summer weather before autumn starts? - BBC Weather
Aug 15,2023 11:40 am

... Low pressure Weather Systems have continued to move in from the Atlantic bringing rain and strong winds...

Climate change: Last year's UK heatwave 'a sign of things to come'

Climate change: Last year's UK heatwave 'a sign of things to come'
Jul 26,2023 7:21 pm

... One of the elements that might have led to a very hot year in 2022 and may explain the current wetter summer are changes in the jet stream, the fast moving winds that carry Weather Systems across the Atlantic to the UK...

Heatwave: Is it coming to the UK? - BBC Weather

Heatwave: Is it coming to the UK? - BBC Weather
Jul 18,2023 8:41 am

... To the north of the jet stream you have the cooler Arctic air with rain bearing Weather Systems being formed...

Where has the summer gone? - BBC Weather

Where has the summer gone? - BBC Weather
Jul 13,2023 9:10 am

... Weather Systems will move overhead rapidly and the weather will change from day to day...

The slow and delicate aircraft taking on spy missions

Feb 1,2023 10:41 pm

By Michael DempseyTechnology of Business reporter

Most military spying is conducted from satellites hundreds of miles above The Earth 's surface.

But there's a new entrant in the old game of keeping an eye on your strategic opponents, and this new spy is surprisingly sluggish.

Phasa-35 moves so slowly it can appear to be going backwards.

This weird, elongated British aircraft is powered by small electric engines attached to elongated wings encasing solar panels. These capture power during The Day and keep the two engines turning at night.

Solar Power is stored in packs of lithium batteries like phone batteries. Having so many batteries means some can fail during weeks of flight without any impact on endurance.

With a 35 metre wingspan, pencil-thin carbon fibre fuselage and 150kg all-up weight Phasa-35 looks a little flimsy.

The Wheels it rolls on to Take Off are abandoned on the ground, the machine landing slowly on its two engine pods, and changing the bruised propellers after every flight. It resembles an arrow that has grown long thin wings.

That fragile appearance, more insect than aeroplane, is One clue as to why Bae Systems chose a US military range in New Mexico to test Phasa-35 In July this year.

The normally-benign climate in the South-West US gave the aircraft its best chance of climbing to 66,000ft, twice the altitude of a commercial jet, without encountering strong winds that might tip the delicate machine over and into a dive earthwards.

Clambering to its stratospheric destination at a lazy 55 mph the machine can travel backwards in relation to The Earth if it hits winds of higher velocity as it noses upwards through Weather Systems .

One of its rivals, the Zephyr solar-powered high altitude aircraft, flew for up to 18 Days during 2021 tests in Arizona.

Zephyr was also built in the UK, for Airbus. But a more ambitious flight lasting 64 days ended in a crash In July 2022 due to high-altitude air turbulence.

In the rarefied air above 60,000ft such aircraft can dodge The Weather , but They also get very little lift from their wings, leaving them vulnerable to any buffeting or gusts.

This set-back took place while the Zephyr was testing the potential for such aircraft on behalf of the US Army.

Military minds on both sides of The Atlantic are pondering How To use them as satellite substitutes. They belong to a new category of Unmanned Aircraft , The High Altitude Pseudo-Satellite (HAPS).

In the UK the Ministry of Defence (MoD) says early pseudo-satellite trials have evolved into Project Aether . This embraces high-altitude balloons as well as solar-powered planes.

Carrying a small payload of cameras or other sensors One HAPS could sit above an area of interest for months, eavesdropping on communications or relaying information on hostile troop Movements .

Shot down off the US coast in February appeared to heft a large package of electronic equipment. By contrast a pseudo-satellite is limited in The Weight it can carry.

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One key attraction of such spying equipment is Price - They cost a fraction of launching a satellite into space.

But before this vision is realised potential customers must be convinced the aircraft can stay aloft long enough to complete its job.

Weather forecasting on a very detailed scale plays a big part in this project. As the MoD states, " The Understanding of How To operate pseudo-satellites within the stratosphere (above 60,000 ft) is novel but maturing all The Time . "

The Phasa-35 trials relied on a laser sensing system that measured weather conditions and wind speeds every 500ft up until the pseudo-satellite's final altitude. This granular approach to weather forecasting allowed Phasa-35 to dodge any unwelcome turbulence.

Phil Varty, head of business development for Phasa-35 at Bae Systems , points out that loitering pseudo-satellites can stay " fairly still".

This is attractive for military clients who want to observe One spot for weeks, and for commercial clients who might want to put hundreds of pseudo-satellites up in formation to offer internet connections across a remote area.

Mr Varty's team are building up experience to take on tougher weather conditions, though just like a space launch They will never gamble with thunderstorms.

He notes that pseudo-satellites have much in common with Space Exploration . " This is all a bit like the space industry used to be, it's just opening up. "

In Theory Phasa-35 is in the running to win records for high-altitude endurance, but Mr Varty wants his engineers to keep their feet on the ground. " I keep telling The Team we're not chasing records here. "

Military planners fear that jamming or destruction In Space might deprive a nation of its spy satellites just when They are most needed. So pseudo-satellites represent a relatively cheap back-up.

Douglas Barrie, a defence and aerospace specialist at The International Institute for Strategic Studies Think Tank in London describes this as " an alternative approach to what a spy balloon gives you. A pseudo-satellite can sit over an area of interest for days and it's covert, there's not much radar signature. This is a technology on the cusp of having its time arrive. "

Bae Systems plans to expand the capability of Phasa-35 towards 2025. Four more aircraft will be made at Alton in Hampshire, though the wingspan means each One gets broken down into parts to be assembled at its launch site.

Italian aerospace giant Leonardo has built a pseudo-satellite called Skydweller and is talking to Saudi Arabian telecoms company Salam about it. Salam is interested in using pseudo-satellites to bounce 5G Internet signals down to earth.

But Leonardo won't talk about Skydweller, possibly because going slow turns out to be very Hard Work indeed.

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Source of news: bbc.com

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