The Flash Before the FloodNovember 21, 2008Flash floods are the most common natural disaster in the United States, and because of their unpredictability they're the leading weather-related cause of death for Americans. They usually arrive with little or no warning, but a Tel Aviv University researcher is trying to predict where and when they will occur ― using lightning. Prof. Colin Price, coordinator of the international "Flash Project" and head of the Geophysics and Planetary Physics Department at Tel Aviv University, is studying the link between lightning and subsequent flash floods. The three-year study includes scientists from five European countries, and its results are expected to be adopted by weather forecasting agencies around the world. The goal is to develop an early warning system for people in the path of a flood. "Flash floods are different from normal floods, which are often the product of melting snow. Flash floods are short-lived and dump a lot of rain," says Prof. Price, a climate change specialist. "Using the radiation emitted from lightning flashes, we've developed a system that can give adequate warning to the public ― and save lives."
Eventually, the Flash system may be used to send messages to cell phones, RSS feeds, GPS units and other devices to warn people in the path of a flash flood and avert disaster. "Nowcasting" for Flood Warnings Unlike normal floods which arrive slowly and with more warning, flash floods are particularly dangerous because they happen so quickly, developing from thunderstorms that form in a matter of hours. By measuring the radiation emitted by lightning, researchers can pinpoint the most intense thunderstorms, and the resulting rainfall can be located and tracked. This data has been used to predict both the path of a storm and where heavy rainfall will appear ― crucial predictions, since the impact of flash floods depends on ground topography, slope and vegetation cover. "Nowcasting," which predicts what conditions will be in the next few hours, versus "forecasting" a day or two in advance of expected weather conditions, is critical. Looking at real-time lightning data, Tel Aviv University researchers can see where storms will travel over a period of a few hours, and can warn people in the path of the flood of impending danger. Such a tool will become even more relevant as erratic weather patterns, predicted by climate-change scientists today, become a reality tomorrow. A Flood of Warnings Delivered in a Flash The research from the Flash program can be extrapolated for use anywhere in the world, including the flash flood-prone regions of the U.S. For example, the U.S. National Lightning Detection Network could easily apply the results of the Flash research. "This is a tool for the future," says Prof. Price. "And it will be even more exciting in the next decade, when we'll have continuous real-time detection of lightning activity from satellites. That data will be used to predict floods anywhere." The U.S. will also have geostationary satellites with lightning trackers that will take a picture every 15 minutes from 36,000 kilometers above the earth. In the meantime, end users and educational institutions can connect and learn about floods on the "Flash" website. By mid 2009, Prof. Price says, real-time maps will be available to predict floods in a flash. American Friends of Tel Aviv University Science News and Science Current Events Tag Cloud This tag cloud is a visual representation of term frequencies of random science news topics with common terms grouped together and emphasized by their display size. Cigarettes Glaucoma Green Tea Staph Infection Hurricane San Andreas Fault Radiation Therapy Genetic Mutation Gastric Bypass Surgery Eye Disease Dinosaur Insecticide Malignant Melanoma Gamma-ray Burst HIV treatment Bypass Surgery Ultraviolet Radiation Obsessive-compulsive Disorder Vaccination Restless Legs Syndrome Knee Replacement Chromatin Birth Defects Walking Salmon
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Related Flash Floods Current Events and Flash Floods News Articles Hispaniola Was a Tropical Cyclone Target Five Times in 2008 In 2008, residents of Hispaniola experienced one of their worst hurricane seasons in recent memory. Hispaniola, the Caribbean island containing Haiti and the Dominican Republic, is located directly within the hurricane belt, and was pummeled by five tropical cyclones last year: Fay, Gustav, Hanna, Ike, and low over the Dominican Republic on Sept. 24 what would become Kyle after moving north. Scientists Test System to Forecast Flash Floods along Colorado's Front Range People living near vulnerable creeks and rivers along Colorado's Front Range may soon get advance notice of potentially deadly floods, thanks to a new forecasting system being tested this summer by the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) in Boulder, Colo. NASA Detects Trends in Rainfall Traits from Drizzles to Downpours Breaking news in recent years has been swamped with stories of extreme weather — flash floods in East Asia, prolonged drought in Africa, destructive hurricanes like Hurricane Katrina, heavy monsoon rainfall in South Asia, and an historic heat wave in Europe. New flood-tolerant rice offers relief for world's poorest farmers A gene that enables rice to survive complete submergence has been identified by a team of researchers at the International Rice Research Institute in the Philippines and at the University of California's Davis and Riverside campuses. Titan's seas are sand Until a couple of years ago, scientists thought the dark equatorial regions of Titan might be liquid oceans. Verocytotoxin-producing E.coli food poisoning and its prevention The Institute of Food Science & Technology, through its Public Affairs and Technical & Legislative Committees has authorised the following Information Statement, dated November 2004, prepared by its Professional Food Microbiology Group, and replacing the version dated 14 September 1996. "For they sow the WIND..." Early summer is the season for extreme weather conditions such as violent thunderstorms in central Europe. Studies undertaken by insurance companies indicate that climate change has a dramatic impact on weather conditions. No wonder, then, that home owners, farmers, gardeners and mountain climbers want a fast, up-to-the-minute, reliable information service that allows them to react quickly and appropriately on hail storms or flash floods. The Fraunhofer Institute for Software and Systems Engineering ISST has developed such an information system: an info-logistical program that goes by the name of WIND - Weather Information on Demand. Together with Bavarian insurance company VKB (Versicherung El Ni'±o is yawning Four years ago, torrential rains battered the Southern US, mudslides struck in Peru - and the inhabitants of Canada`s west coast saved up to 30% on their winter heating bills. The cause? El Ni'±o, a huge temperature shift in the Pacific Ocean which spawns climate changes globally. Today, using satellite Earth observation data, scientists are detecting the early warning signs of a new El Ni'±o event and predicting that it will develop over the next 3 to 6 months, bringing climate changes to countries thousands of miles from the western Pacific, birthplace of the event itself. "In normal years, there`s a large area of warm water in the western Pacific and colder water at the eastern side. In More Flash Floods Current Events and Flash Floods News Articles |
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