Climate models have come a long way from simplistic beginnings in the 1950s
By andClimate models, they just don’t make ‘em like they used to.
Of course, that may not be a bad thing. Like an Atari to an Xbox One, a Nokia brick to an iPhone 6, have come a long way since their early predecessors. In a video recently published by , you can see just how much of an update computer-run models have undergone from their humble beginnings in the 1950s.
The video shows one of the first global climate models ever created as it models weather in the northern hemisphere from a polar view. The grainy video and barely-there colors are a far cry from the of today, but all the are there from the familiar—precipitation and high and low pressure systems—to the weather-nerd friendly—geopotential heights and atmospheric temperature.
And to complete the whole flashback, it’s worth considering the computing power itself. Leith’s model ran on one of the fastest computers of the day, the (amazing ). Of course what was fast in 1960 wouldn’t do you much good today: the iPhone 6 is literally a million times faster. And new computers and are likely to come online in the next decade that will leave Leith’s model even further in the dust.
Climate Central. The article was
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