December 12-13, 2009

Air Temperatures The following maximum temperatures were recorded across the state of Hawaii Saturday afternoon:

Lihue, Kauai – 78
Honolulu, Oahu – 82
Kaneohe, Oahu – 80
Kaunakakai, Molokai – 82
Kahului, Maui – 84
Hilo, Hawaii – 81
Kailua-kona – 83

Air Temperatures ranged between these warmest and coolest spots near sea level around the state – and on the highest mountains…at 7pm Saturday evening:

Kailua-kona – 78F
Molokai airport – 68

Haleakala Crater – 50 (near 10,000 feet on Maui)
Mauna Kea summit – 41 (near 14,000 feet on the Big Island)

Precipitation Totals The following numbers represent the largest precipitation totals (inches) during the last 24 hours on each of the major islands, as of Saturday evening:

0.02 Mount Waialeale, Kauai  
0.01 Punaluu Stream, Oahu
0.00 Molokai 
0.00 Lanai
0.00 Kahoolawe
0.01 Oheo Gulch, Maui
0.12 Glenwood, Big Island

Marine WindsHere’s the latest (automatically updated) weather map showing weak high pressure systems to our north-northeast, northeast, and far east of us. The recent light trade winds will gradually become lighter southeast breezes as a ridge moves down over the islands Sunday into Monday. 

Satellite and Radar Images: To view the cloud conditions we have here in Hawaii, please use the following satellite links, starting off with this
Infrared Satellite Image of the islands to see all the clouds around the state during the day and night. This next image is one that gives close images of the islands only during the daytime hours, and is referred to as a Close-up visible image. This next image shows a larger view of the Pacific…giving perspective to the wider ranging cloud patterns in the Pacific Ocean. Finally, here’s a Looping IR satellite image, making viewable the clouds around the islands 24 hours a day. To help you keep track of where any showers may be around the islands, here’s the latest animated radar image.

Hawaii’s MountainsHere’s a link to the live webcam on the summit of near 14,000 foot Mauna Kea on the Big Island of Hawaii. The tallest peak on the island of Maui is the Haleakala Crater, which is near 10,000 feet in elevation. These two webcams are available during the daylight hours here in the islands…and when there’s a big moon rising just after sunset for an hour or two! Plus, during the nights and early mornings you will be able to see stars, and the sunrise too…depending upon weather conditions.

Tropical Cyclone activity in the eastern and central Pacific – Here’s the latest weather information coming out of the
National Hurricane Center, covering the eastern north Pacific. You can find the latest tropical cyclone information for the central north Pacific (where Hawaii is located) by clicking on this link to the Central Pacific Hurricane Center. Here’s a tracking map covering both the eastern and central Pacific Ocean. A satellite image, which shows the entire ocean area between Hawaii and the Mexican coast…can be found here.

 

Aloha Paragraphs

 

http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2034/2047323397_140baf631d.jpg

 
Perfect weather this weekend


More exceptionally nice late autumn weather expected through the weekend…into the first half of the new work week ahead.  Our overlying atmosphere remains dry and stable Saturday…which suggests that very pleasant weather conditions will prevail into the future. The trade winds returned briefly Friday, although will be calming down again this weekend. We will likely end up with light and variable breezes, gradually turning to the east-southeast, and then perhaps southeast by Sunday. The atmosphere will remain clear of haze, until the breezes become southeast, when we could see some haze around the edges. 

The computer models show a weak cold front edging towards Kauai on Monday. It is expected to stall before arriving however, leaving the state in dry weather.  A second stronger cold front is forecast to arrive around the middle of the new week ahead. This one, along with an associated upper trough of low pressure then, could bring more substantial rainfall…as it moves down through the state. In the wake of this rain bearing frontal boundary, drier air will flood into the state, bringing back nice weather, although a bit on the cool side. The upper trough in assocation with the cold front may bring a short spell of snow atop the summits on the Big Island…along with a possible thunderstorm here and there on Thursday.

We saw a brief spell of trade winds Friday…which attained moderately strong levels locally.
The winds will become lighter Saturday afternoon into Sunday and Monday. If they swing far enough around to the southeast direction, we could see hazy conditions, with volcanic haze (vog) moving up into the island chain, from the vents on the Big Island for several days. Looking ahead, the cold front approaching around Wednesday, will likely trigger stronger and gusty south to southwest Kona winds ahead of its arrival. They may be strong enough to necessitate some sort of wind advisory flags to go up then.

Our days will continue to be mostly clear and generally warm…that is after relatively cool mornings. The daytime heating may cause a few afternoon clouds, especially around the mountains. There could be a few showers falling, although they will be light, and most areas will remain completely dry through the weekend into Monday and Tuesday. Things will turn cloudier, windier, and wetter as a cold front ushers in inclement weather beginning next Wednesday-Thursday. There still may be some subtle changes in the outlook, as we press in closer to this robust cold front…but it appears most of the details describe in the paragraphs above will hold true.

It’s early Saturday morning here on Maui, as I begin writing this last section of this morning’s narrative.  Saturday is beginning just all the other beautiful mornings that we’ve seen most of this week. Skies are totally clear, with just the fewest clouds possible viewed over the ocean to our north. It’s a cool morning, with the Kahului airport sporting the chilliest morning observation at 6am…being 60F degrees. Here in Kula, it was 50 degrees at the same time. The visibilities are outstanding, with the West Maui Mountains, and the Haleakala Crater standing out in crisp attention. This lovely weather will hold firm for many more days, that is until around Wednesday, when we’ll see some fun changes bearing down on the state from the northwest. This new aspect of our weather, as noted above, will be a cold front that charges down through the state into Thursday. The good thing is that better weather, albeit it somewhat cooler, will return Friday, and likely into next weekend.

~~~ After work last evening, I went to one of the theatres in Kahului for a foreign film, called Secret (2007). This unusual film starred Jay Chou, Guey Luninei, among others. The most brief synopsis was that a piano prodigy encounters two mysterious students at a college of arts. The film won several awards, including The 2007 44th Golden Horse Award, Best Visual Effects, The Outstanding Taiwanese Film of the Year, and Best Original Film Song. The fact that this film is called Secret, was no surprise by the end! It was anything but straight forward, and had many twists and turns from the past into the future. The aspect that I found most interesting was the touching love story that developed between the two main characters…shown in the poster link above. It was interesting, when I first went into the big theatre, I was the only person sitting there. This certainly caught my attention, just when one other person came in and sat down a couple of seats away. This fellow and I talked briefly before the film started. At the end, since just the two of us were in there, when typically most of the seats are filled, we talked a little more about our impressions. We were both slightly puzzled over what the Secret was, but both of us enjoyed the film nonetheless. I could recommend it to those that are curious, as I enjoyed it thoroughly. Here’s a trailer if you are interested in taking a quick look.

~~~ I’m ready to get out there for my morning walk now, but will be back later, although not exactly sure when. I have a haircut on the north shore this morning, after which I’ll go down to the beach and enjoy this spectacular weather, take a long walk, and jump in the ocean for a swim. Shopping in Paia will be my next event, before probably going to a friend’s birthday party in Haiku. Therefore, I may not get back here for my usual afternoon updates. At the very latest, I’ll be back Sunday morning, if not before. I hope you have a chance to get outside if you live here in the islands, as it will be yet another special day. If you live on the mainland, or elsewhere, I trust that you will stay warm at least! Aloha for now…Glenn.




Interesting: Observers were able to accurately judge some aspects of a stranger’s personality from looking at photographs, according to a study in the current issue of Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin (PSBP), the official monthly journal of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology. Self-esteem, ratings of extraversion and religiosity were correctly judged from physical appearance.

Researchers asked participants to assess the personalities of strangers based first on a photograph posed to the researchers’ specifications and then on a photograph posed the way the subject chose. Those judgments were then compared with how the person and acquaintances rated that individual’s personality.

They found that while both poses provided participants with accurate cues about personality, the spontaneous pose showed more insight, including about the subject’s agreeableness, emotional stability, openness, likability, and loneliness. The study suggested that physical appearance alone can send signals about their true personality.

Interesting2: The gases which formed the Earth’s atmosphere — and probably its oceans — did not come from inside the Earth but from outer space, according to a study by University of Manchester and University of Houston scientists. The report published in the journal Science means that textbook images of ancient Earth with huge volcanoes spewing gas into the atmosphere will have to be rethought.

According to the team, the age-old view that volcanoes were the source of the Earth’s earliest atmosphere must be put to rest. Using world-leading analytical techniques, the team of Dr Greg Holland, Dr Martin Cassidy and Professor Chris Ballentine tested volcanic gases to uncover the new evidence. The research was funded by Natural Environment Research Council (NERC).

"We found a clear meteorite signature in volcanic gases," said Dr Greg Holland the project’s lead scientist. "From that we now know that the volcanic gases could not have contributed in any significant way to the Earth’s atmosphere. "Therefore the atmosphere and oceans must have come from somewhere else, possibly from a late bombardment of gas and water rich materials similar to comets.

"Until now, no one has had instruments capable of looking for these subtle signatures in samples from inside the Earth — but now we can do exactly that." The techniques enabled the team to measure tiny quantities of the un-reactive volcanic trace gases Krypton and Xenon, which revealed an isotopic ‘fingerprint’ matching that of meteorites which is different from that of ‘solar’ gases.

The study is also the first to establish the precise composition of the Krypton present in the Earth’s mantle. Project director Prof Chris Ballentine of The University of Manchester, said: "Many people have seen artist’s impressions of the primordial Earth with huge volcanoes in the background spewing gas to form the atmosphere. "We will now have to redraw this picture."

Interesting3: The massive iceberg that has been headed toward Australia’s southwest coast has prompted authorities to issue a shipping alert. The massive ice chunk, named B17B, is about 1,000 miles from Australia’s southwest coast and is reportedly drifting northward with the wind and current. The iceberg is one of several that broke off of Antarctic ice shelves nearly a decade ago and is estimated to be twice the size of Manhattan.

As the iceberg moves northward, relatively warmer water (50F degrees) will likely cause the iceberg to break up into hundreds of smaller pieces, which could be hazardous to ships. The Australian Bureau of Meteorology issued a shipping alert Friday.

Interesesting4: The picture on many milk cartons shows cows grazing on a pasture next to a country barn and a silo — but the reality is very different. More and more milk comes from confined animal feeding operations (CAFOs), where large herds live in feedlots, awaiting their thrice-daily trip to the milking barn.

A factory farm with 2,000 cows produces as much sewage as a small city, yet there’s no treatment plant. Across the country, big dairies are coming under increased criticism for polluting the air and the water. In New Mexico, they’re in the midst of a manure war. Everyday, an average cow produces six to seven gallons of milk and 18 gallons of manure. New Mexico has 300,000 milk cows.

That totals 5.4 million gallons of manure in the state every day. It’s enough to fill up nine Olympic-size pools. The New Mexico Environment Department reports that two-thirds of the state’s 150 dairies are contaminating groundwater with excess nitrogen from cattle excrement. Either the waste lagoons are leaking, or manure is being applied too heavily on farmland.

Interesting5: People paid by the hour exhibit a stronger relationship between income and happiness, according to a study published in the current issue of Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin (PSPB), the official journal of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology. Researchers explored the relationship between income and happiness by focusing on the organizational arrangements that make the connection between time and money. They found that the way in which an employee is paid is tied to their feeling of happiness.

The researchers theorize that hourly wage-earners focus more attention on their pay than those who earn a salary. That concrete, consistent focus on the worth of the employee’s time in each paycheck influences the level of happiness the employee feels.

"Much of our day-to-day lives are subject to various organizational practices of payment that can prime different ways of thinking, such as the monetary value of one’s time," write authors Sanford E. DeVoe of the University of Toronto and Jeffrey Pfeffer of Stanford University. "It is important to consider the broader context in which people live and work in order to gain a better understanding of the determinants of happiness."

Interesting6: The movement towards zero emission electric cars is gaining a tremendous amount of momentum. As we move into 2010, practical electric vehicles for the vast majority of the public will be available late in the year with the release of the Nissan Leaf. If you plan to purchase an electric car in 2010, you can expect a healthy federal income tax credit to reward you.

For plug-in electric vehicles with a gross vehicle weight of less than 14,000 pounds acquired after December 31, 2009, the maximum tax credit available will be $7,500. The base amount of the credit is $2,500. If the car has a battery capacity of at least 5kWh, then an additional $417 in tax credits will be available.

For every kWh of battery capacity in excess of 5kWh, $417 will be added to the total amount. The additional amount, based on battery capacity, over the base amount is limited to a total of $5,000. If you buy an electric car, charging it will be an obvious concern.

Thanks to the Recovery Act, money has been allocated to build the necessary infrastructure in limited markets to support the growth of the electric vehicle. If you spend money putting in a charger, there is a 30% tax credit on the amount spent. The total credit amount is limited to $30,000 for commercial/retail installations and $1,000 for homeowners, and is set to sunset at the end of 2010.

Interesting7: Long, long ago, some of the first dinosaurs walked the Earth. But scientists have not known with any confidence where those initial dino prints were made. Much more recently, hikers stumbled across a few bits of bone at Ghost Ranch in New Mexico, leading to the discovery of a game-changing dinosaur that reveals where it all began.

The dinosaur, now called Tawa hallae, had a body that was only the size of a medium to large dog, but its remains have helped scientists shore up where dinosaurs came from. The research team used the extremely well-preserved and complete skeletal remains as a means to fitting the newbie and other early dinosaurs onto the evolutionary tree.

"[The results] showed a lot of the South American dinosaurs in the Triassic were the most primitive dinosaurs we have found to date," said lead researcher Sterling Nesbitt of the University of Texas at Austin. "They are closest to the common ancestor of all dinosaurs." (Nesbitt was at the American Museum of Natural History in New York when he made the discovery.)

The upshot: the earliest dinosaurs originated and diverged in what is now South America before trekking across the globe more than 220 million years ago when the continents were assembled into one gargantuan landmass called Pangea. Nesbitt and his colleagues describe the dinosaur in the Dec. 11 issue of the journal Science. Their analyses suggest T. hallae lived some 213 million years ago and was a primitive theropod (mostly carnivorous dinosaur that walked on two legs).

Like Velociraptor, the dinosaur was likely covered with feather-like structures and sported claws and serrated teeth for snagging prey. After the hikers stumbled upon the dinosaur quarry in 2004, scientists excavated the area in northern New Mexico. They uncovered five to seven partial skeletons belonging to T. hallae species buried together in a relatively small pocket among a jumble of tens of thousands of other fossils.

The excavated skeletons suggest this species had a snout-to-tail tip length of about 6 to 13 feet, with a hip height of 3 to 5 feet. The bones suggested that when alive, T. hallae was equipped with air sacs surrounding its neck and braincase — features found in birds today. To find out how T. hallae was related to other early theropods and how the animal came to its North American resting place, the researchers compared T. hallae with other dinosaurs.

"If you have continents splitting apart, you get isolation," Nesbitt said. "So when barriers develop, you would expect that multiple carnivorous dinosaurs in a region should represent a closely related endemic radiation. But that is what we don’t see in early dinosaur evolution." Rather, in the Ghost Ranch sediments they found three carnivorous dinosaur species, including T. hallae, that were only distantly related.

"This implies that each carnivorous dinosaur species descended from a separate lineage before arriving in [the part of Pangea that is now] North America, instead of all evolving from a local ancestor," said study researcher Randall Irmis of the Utah Museum of Natural History and the University of Utah. That wouldn’t be surprising, since the giants were free to roam at the time.

"[Dinosaurs] could essentially walk from pretty far south in the Southern Hemisphere to pretty far north in the Northern Hemisphere," Nesbitt told LiveScience. The team then looked at a variety of reptile groups to see if other animals were wandering across the still-connected continents during the Late Triassic period (about 225 million years ago).

And just like the early theropods, such reptiles were indeed making multiple trips between what are now North and South America, the researchers speculate. This free movement of animals at the time means there were no physical barriers, such as large mountain ranges, hemming dinosaurs and others in to certain parts of Pangea.

But this presents a seeming paradox. "We wondered," Irmis said, "if reptiles, including dinosaurs, were able to freely move around Pangea during the Late Triassic, then why aren’t there any sauropodomorph and ornithischian dinosaurs in North America during the Triassic?" They think the answer is climate. For some reason, only the carnivorous dinosaurs found temperatures in North America to be hospitable, the researchers suggest.