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Into the Eye of a Hurricane
NOAA/ESRL
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Surfdaddy Orca is Editor-in-Chief of The Seventh Sun and an avid SL surfer. He did the initial site map for the Diegoland sim and enjoys building and scripting.
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Meteroa is an educational sim hosted by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and the Earth System Research Laboratory (ESRL) |
METEROA — The engines roar and the propellers start to spin. The P3
Orion, a land-based, long range anti-submarine warfare (ASW) patrol aircraft,
says “United States Dept of Commerce” on the side. You are sitting
inside the plane as it starts to take off and fly toward a spinning
hurricane. A cultured female British voice comes over your Heads Up
Display (HUD).
“You are now entering the eye of the hurricane. It is usually calm
here. We’ll now turn and enter the leading edge of the hurricane.”
So begins an innovative Second Life climate and weather simulation.
Welcome to Meteroa, the educational sim by the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and the Earth System Research Laboratory
(ESRL).
Meteroa, derived from the Greek adjective meteoras, means “suspended in the
air.” The hurricane is only part of the fun. There is a sea life
submarine ride, a tsunami, a demonstration of a real-time temperature map with
narration by Exploratorium Chief Scientist Paul Doherty, and a melting
glacier.
The recent Katrina hurricane, the massive tsunami near Indonesia, and Al
Gore’s academy-award nominated film “An Inconvenient Truth” have brought an
acute public awareness of global climate and weather. NOAA/ESRL’s
sponsorship of a Second Life sim, along with Aimee Weber’s (and others) LSL
scripting, have produced a remarkable 3D educational experience that will keep
students coming back for more.
Aimee herself says: “The Second Life entrance of the National Oceanic &
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and the Earth System Research Laboratory
(ESRL) has brought all the fun and excitement you’ve naturally come to expect
of fluid dynamics! In case you haven’t been on the any submarine rides lately,
NOAA is the governmental agency tasked with researching the oceans, climate,
weather, and anything else having to do with gigantic masses of air and
water.”
And, speaking of submarine rides, the one on Meteroa is a doozy. Killer
whales and dolphins swim along the surface as your submarine slowly submerges
into an underwater wonderland of rays, skates, jelly fish, brightly colored
tropicals, corals, and jagged rocks. You are encouraged to “jump off”
anytime and expore the depths in more detail.
The melting glacier is much more sobering. As reported by Rik Riel, a
large thermometer stands in front of a glacier, showing changes in global
temperature from year to year since 1990. Extrapolating on current
trends, you click on markers for the years 2000, 2025, 2050, 2075 and 2100.
As the years go on, three things occur: the temperature rises, the glacier
melts, and the water level rises. By 2100 its up to your knees.
You have to wonder how many destroyed villages and lives that equals.
You don’t have to stand in water up to your knees to appreciate The Real Time
Weather simulation. You walk directly onto a large 3D map of the United
States with little clouds (some with rain or snow falling) that are gradually
drifting across the continent with the prevailing winds. There are
numerous scripted weather stations dotting the map that collect real-time
METAR data from NOAA at 8-minute intervals.
The stations decode and render into models various types of cloud cover and
precipitation models. The models also include special weather conditions
such as thunderstorms and tornadoes. Temperature is represented by
warmer and cooler shades of color.
Perhaps the most convincing (and once again sobering) simulations is the
tsunami. You hear a voice on your HUD (Aimee Weber again, it turns out)
describe the precise interaction of tectonic and oceanic forces that lead up
to a tsunami. Suddenly the water starts to churn. Then, just as
suddenly, the water recedes, deceptively leading you to think it’s merely
lowtide. Think again. A wall of water 6 stories high is about to
crash down on you.
Rik Riel again reports: “There’s no where to run, and nothing that can stop
it. The water washes over you, destroying everything in its path. All
that is left is rubble as the water slowly recedes.”
And so the adventure ends, just as if you were able to jump in and then out of
the Discovery Channel. You started out flying into a hurricane.
You took a submarine ride, watched a glacier melt, visited a real-time weather
map of the United States, and ended up wishing you had a jet-powered surfboard
to escape a tsunami. An inconvient truth indeed. Well, note to
self: next time remember to bring a wetsuit and a life raft!
NOAA Virtual Island: Meteroa (176,160,26)
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