Tim Nye the Science Guy Tackles Icicles

The icicle went completely through the foam!

On Monday, I did a story about icicle dangers. I wondered how I was going to tackle this and decided to do a couple of experiments. I went and found an icicle and then got this piece of foam. I dropped this (relatively small) icicle from [...]

1,000 Posts Later

It’s hard to beleive that we’ve posted 1,000 stories on the weather blog.  We started with a page on the main WJACTV.com website.  That didn’t have enough adaptability, so we moved to Blogger and later to WordPress.  We’ve been on WordPress for a while now.

This is officially our 1,000th post according to the stats system that we use.  I have a feeling that we hit 1,000 a while ago, but this is a great opportunity to look back and see some of the cooler topics we’ve talked about over the last 3 years.

Below the jump is a list of 13 categories with some of the cooler topics.  You can click on the category to go to a list of the posts about that topic.  Click in for the list. (Read More)

If You Don’t Wanna Cancel The Snow…

…why not just make some more!

I found this article on Yahoo’s news website.  It talks about how Beijing is actually taking the opposite route of Moscow by producing snow to alleviate the effects of a drought.

Map of Snow Cover in China

Map of Snow Cover in China

Chinese meteorologists covered Beijing in snow Sunday after seeding clouds to bring winter weather to the capital in an effort to combat a lingering drought, state media reported.

The unusually early snow blanketed the capital from Sunday morning and kept falling for half the day, helped by temperatures as low as minus 2 Celsius (29 Fahrenheit) and strong winds from the north, Xinhua news agency reported.

Besides falling in the northeastern provinces of Liaoning and Jilin and the northern province of Hebei, the eastern port city of Tianjin also got its first snow of the autumn, the report said.

“We wont miss any opportunity of artificial precipitation since Beijing is suffering from the lingering drought,” the report quoted Zhang Qiang, head of the Beijing Weather Modification Office, as saying.

Chinese meteorologists have for years sought to make rain by injecting special chemicals into clouds.

Although the technique often gets results, a drought in the north of the country has continued for over a decade.

Besides the snow, which the Beijing Evening News said was the earliest to hit the capital in 10 years, the cold weather and strong winds also delayed air travel from Beijing’s Capital Airport, while interrupting passenger shipping services off the coast of Shandong province in the east, Xinhua said.

Link Here

That got me thinking about cloud seeding and I started wondering if we did this in the United States.  The information that I found suggests that we do.

(Read More)