From Deseret News archives:
Utah group goes storm-chasing in Australia
Trio among 100 experts studying how clouds work
"In elementary school I used to lay out in the field on the playground and get my friends to lay down with me and look at the clouds."
Ed Zipser became hooked on weather-watching after a hurricane knocked down trees where he used to ride his tricycle. "I loved big, nasty storms. When I was 5 years old my aunt taught me how to read the New York Times weather map."
Jay Mace was a late bloomer by comparison. He didn't develop a passion for storm study until he joined the Navy. "I became a weather guy because it kept me from turning bolts in the engine room."
Now, the University of Utah threesome has nearly 70 years of combined experience researching storms, and this month they took that expertise to Australia.
For several weeks Zipser and Mace, both U. meteorology professors, and Cohen, a meteorology graduate student, represented Utah and the United States in a multimillion-dollar storm experiment featuring more than 100 researchers from 10 countries, including the United States, Canada, Australia, Japan and several European nations.
The primary focus of the experiment: to figure out how clouds work.
"The effect of clouds on climate is one of the great unknowns of science," according to Zipser.
That's because the clouds we see with the naked eye aren't the giant, fluffy, slow-moving dinosaurs and puppy dogs they seem.
"Clouds consist of tiny droplets of water or tiny ice crystals, and can range in size from a micrometer (1/1000th of a millimeter) right on up to a millimeter size and bigger big enough to see," Zipser explained.
Depending on the type of cloud, they can form and evaporate in seconds.
"A thunderstorm goes through an entire life cycle in an hour. That makes forecasting very difficult," Zipser said.
In fact, scientists have yet to formulate a precise picture of what they call the dynamics and microphysics of clouds. Meteorologists, who rely on models and simulations, are working without an accurate model of why, for example, a cloud forms, or how particles within a cloud are sized and spaced, and what determines a cloud's life cycle.
Why is this important?
"We want to understand clouds on a microscopic scale so we can determine the impact on a massive scale," said Mace, who is one of half a dozen lead scientists who conceived of the experiment.
Comments
- Dixie, SLCC notch wins 12:44 a.m.
- Alabama squeaks past Auburn 12:34 a.m.
- UVU, SUU suffer tourney setbacks 12:33 a.m.
- Editorial: Food is not the enemy 12:17 a.m.
- U.S. must has work in Afghanistan 12:17 a.m.
- The winners and the losers 12:17 a.m.
- Beauty is not the same as TV 12:17 a.m.
- Letters: Ethics petition a fraud 12:17 a.m.
- Letters: Global warming a plot 12:17 a.m.
- Letters: Reckless imbalance 12:17 a.m.
- BYU would like friendlier rivalry
264 - Protests against Phoenix LDS temple
211 - Thunder rolls by Jazz
136 - Letters: Rushing to judge Palin
133 - Boys basketball rankings
128 - Editorial: Poor welcome for Palin
112 - Man trapped in Nutty Putty cave dies
109 - Letters: Trump card for believers
93 - Rivalry Week is highly profane
84 - Utah, BYU are top choices for bowls
75
I wanted to tell them not to go. I dropped subtle hints. "My money is on...
When I was a kid, I worshipped my grandpa. He was undoubtedly my hero....
"You are the very epitome of self-indulgence liberal crassness. You care...
I thought it was a great parade. Isn't it the only one in Salt Lake County?...
is struggling in some aspects of his game. We saw what he did last year early...
Having explored caves as a youth and spent 31 yrs working occasionally...
How do the Utes continue to do this? They are bad enough to lose to lousy...
A little help here. Harmon says Utah should be on a 3-0 win streak. I assume...
disgruntled parents need to stay off the blogs...
Honk if you intercepted Max Hall.
however it pertinent to look at their schedule and then look at ours. Because...
and there are no ute fans, only bandwagon fans, nice try though




You can be the first to comment on this story.