Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Atmospheric rivers set to increase UK winter flooding

Atmospheric rivers set to increase UK winter flooding [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 23-Jul-2013
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Contact: Michael Bishop
michael.bishop@iop.org
01-179-301-032
Institute of Physics

The prolonged heat wave that has bathed the UK in sunshine over the past month has given the country an unexpected taste of summer that has seemed to be missing in recent years.

However, a new study published today, 24 July, in IOP Publishing's Environmental Research Letters, has provided warnings that will chime with those accustomed to more typical British weather.

According to the study, winter flooding in the UK is set to get more severe and more frequent under the influence of climate change as a result of a change in the characteristics of atmospheric rivers (ARs).

ARs are narrow regions of intense moisture flows in the lower troposphere of the atmosphere that deliver sustained and heavy rainfall to mid-latitude regions such as the UK.

They are responsible for many of the largest winter floods in the mid-latitudes and can carry extremely large amounts of water: the AR responsible for flooding in the northwest of the UK in 2009 transported 4500 times more water than the average flow in the River Thames in London.

The researchers, from the University of Reading and University of Iowa, found that large parts of the projected changes in AR frequency and intensity would be down to thermodynamic changes in the atmosphere, rather than the natural variability of the climate, suggesting that it is a response to anthropogenic climate change.

To reach these conclusions, the researchers used simulations from five state-of-the-art climate models to investigate how the characteristics of ARs may change under future climate change scenarios.

Firstly, they used the climate models to see how accurately they could simulate the ARs that occurred between 1980 and 2005. The five models did this successfully and were deemed capable of projecting how future ARs will develop under different scenarios.

The models were then used to simulate future conditions under two scenarios RCP4.5 and RCP8.5 that represent different, yet equally plausible, scenarios for future increases in greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere. They projected changes that would occur between 2074 and 2099.

Each of the five models simulated an increase in AR frequency. For the RCP8.5 projections, which represents stronger increases in greenhouse gas concentrations than RCP4.5, there was a striking level of consistency in the magnitude of change in AR frequency all models showed an approximate doubling of the number of future ARs compared to the simulations for 1980 2005.

The models also projected an increase in intensity of the ARs, meaning an AR impacting the UK in the future is projected to deliver more moisture, potentially causing larger precipitation totals.

Lead author of the research, Dr David Lavers, said: "ARs could become stronger in terms of their moisture transport. In a warming world, atmospheric water vapour content is expected to rise due to an increase in saturation water vapour pressure with air temperature. This is likely to result in increased water vapour transport.

"The link between ARs and flooding is already well established, so an increase in AR frequency is likely to lead an increased number of heavy winter rainfall events and floods. More intense ARs are likely to lead to higher rainfall totals, and thus larger flood events."

###

From Wednesday 24 July, this paper can be downloaded from http://iopscience.iop.org/1748-9326/8/3/034010/article

Notes to Editors

Contact

1. For further information, a full draft of the journal paper or contact with one of the researchers, contact IOP Press Officer, Michael Bishop:

Tel: 0117 930 1032
E-mail: michael.bishop@iop.org

IOP Publishing Journalist Area

2. The IOP Publishing Journalist Area gives journalists access to embargoed press releases, advanced copies of papers, supplementary images and videos. In addition to this, a weekly news digest is uploaded into the Journalist Area every Friday, highlighting a selection of newsworthy papers set to be published in the following week.

Login details also give free access to IOPscience, IOP Publishing's journal platform.

To apply for a free subscription to this service, please email Michael Bishop, IOP Press Officer, michael.bishop@iop.org, with your name, organisation, address and a preferred username.

Future changes in atmospheric rivers and their implications for winter flooding in Britain

3. The published version of the paper 'Future changes in atmospheric rivers and their implications for winter flooding in Britain' (David A Lavers et al 2013 Environ. Res. Lett. 8 034010) will be freely available online from Wednesday 24 July. It will be available at http://iopscience.iop.org/1748-9326/8/3/034010/article.

Environmental Research Letters

4. Environmental Research Letters is an open access journal that covers all of environmental science, providing a coherent and integrated approach including research articles, perspectives and editorials.

IOP Publishing

5. IOP Publishing provides a range of journals, magazines, websites and services that enable researchers and research organisations to reach the widest possible audience for their research.

We combine the culture of a learned society with global reach and highly efficient and effective publishing systems and processes. With offices in the UK, US, Germany, China and Japan, and staff in many other locations including Mexico and Russia, we serve researchers in the physical and related sciences in all parts of the world.

IOP Publishing is a wholly owned subsidiary of the Institute of Physics. The Institute is a leading scientific society promoting physics and bringing physicists together for the benefit of all. Any profits generated by IOP Publishing are used by the Institute to support science and scientists in both the developed and developing world. Go to ioppublishing.org.

The Institute of Physics

6. The Institute of Physics is a leading scientific society. We are a charitable organisation with a worldwide membership of more than 50,000, working together to advance physics education, research and application. We engage with policymakers and the general public to develop awareness and understanding of the value of physics and, through IOP Publishing, we are world leaders in professional scientific communications. Go to http://www.iop.org


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AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Atmospheric rivers set to increase UK winter flooding [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 23-Jul-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Michael Bishop
michael.bishop@iop.org
01-179-301-032
Institute of Physics

The prolonged heat wave that has bathed the UK in sunshine over the past month has given the country an unexpected taste of summer that has seemed to be missing in recent years.

However, a new study published today, 24 July, in IOP Publishing's Environmental Research Letters, has provided warnings that will chime with those accustomed to more typical British weather.

According to the study, winter flooding in the UK is set to get more severe and more frequent under the influence of climate change as a result of a change in the characteristics of atmospheric rivers (ARs).

ARs are narrow regions of intense moisture flows in the lower troposphere of the atmosphere that deliver sustained and heavy rainfall to mid-latitude regions such as the UK.

They are responsible for many of the largest winter floods in the mid-latitudes and can carry extremely large amounts of water: the AR responsible for flooding in the northwest of the UK in 2009 transported 4500 times more water than the average flow in the River Thames in London.

The researchers, from the University of Reading and University of Iowa, found that large parts of the projected changes in AR frequency and intensity would be down to thermodynamic changes in the atmosphere, rather than the natural variability of the climate, suggesting that it is a response to anthropogenic climate change.

To reach these conclusions, the researchers used simulations from five state-of-the-art climate models to investigate how the characteristics of ARs may change under future climate change scenarios.

Firstly, they used the climate models to see how accurately they could simulate the ARs that occurred between 1980 and 2005. The five models did this successfully and were deemed capable of projecting how future ARs will develop under different scenarios.

The models were then used to simulate future conditions under two scenarios RCP4.5 and RCP8.5 that represent different, yet equally plausible, scenarios for future increases in greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere. They projected changes that would occur between 2074 and 2099.

Each of the five models simulated an increase in AR frequency. For the RCP8.5 projections, which represents stronger increases in greenhouse gas concentrations than RCP4.5, there was a striking level of consistency in the magnitude of change in AR frequency all models showed an approximate doubling of the number of future ARs compared to the simulations for 1980 2005.

The models also projected an increase in intensity of the ARs, meaning an AR impacting the UK in the future is projected to deliver more moisture, potentially causing larger precipitation totals.

Lead author of the research, Dr David Lavers, said: "ARs could become stronger in terms of their moisture transport. In a warming world, atmospheric water vapour content is expected to rise due to an increase in saturation water vapour pressure with air temperature. This is likely to result in increased water vapour transport.

"The link between ARs and flooding is already well established, so an increase in AR frequency is likely to lead an increased number of heavy winter rainfall events and floods. More intense ARs are likely to lead to higher rainfall totals, and thus larger flood events."

###

From Wednesday 24 July, this paper can be downloaded from http://iopscience.iop.org/1748-9326/8/3/034010/article

Notes to Editors

Contact

1. For further information, a full draft of the journal paper or contact with one of the researchers, contact IOP Press Officer, Michael Bishop:

Tel: 0117 930 1032
E-mail: michael.bishop@iop.org

IOP Publishing Journalist Area

2. The IOP Publishing Journalist Area gives journalists access to embargoed press releases, advanced copies of papers, supplementary images and videos. In addition to this, a weekly news digest is uploaded into the Journalist Area every Friday, highlighting a selection of newsworthy papers set to be published in the following week.

Login details also give free access to IOPscience, IOP Publishing's journal platform.

To apply for a free subscription to this service, please email Michael Bishop, IOP Press Officer, michael.bishop@iop.org, with your name, organisation, address and a preferred username.

Future changes in atmospheric rivers and their implications for winter flooding in Britain

3. The published version of the paper 'Future changes in atmospheric rivers and their implications for winter flooding in Britain' (David A Lavers et al 2013 Environ. Res. Lett. 8 034010) will be freely available online from Wednesday 24 July. It will be available at http://iopscience.iop.org/1748-9326/8/3/034010/article.

Environmental Research Letters

4. Environmental Research Letters is an open access journal that covers all of environmental science, providing a coherent and integrated approach including research articles, perspectives and editorials.

IOP Publishing

5. IOP Publishing provides a range of journals, magazines, websites and services that enable researchers and research organisations to reach the widest possible audience for their research.

We combine the culture of a learned society with global reach and highly efficient and effective publishing systems and processes. With offices in the UK, US, Germany, China and Japan, and staff in many other locations including Mexico and Russia, we serve researchers in the physical and related sciences in all parts of the world.

IOP Publishing is a wholly owned subsidiary of the Institute of Physics. The Institute is a leading scientific society promoting physics and bringing physicists together for the benefit of all. Any profits generated by IOP Publishing are used by the Institute to support science and scientists in both the developed and developing world. Go to ioppublishing.org.

The Institute of Physics

6. The Institute of Physics is a leading scientific society. We are a charitable organisation with a worldwide membership of more than 50,000, working together to advance physics education, research and application. We engage with policymakers and the general public to develop awareness and understanding of the value of physics and, through IOP Publishing, we are world leaders in professional scientific communications. Go to http://www.iop.org


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-07/iop-ars072213.php

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After mixup, fireworks erupt again in Whitey Bulger trial

AP Photo/Elise Amendola

Steve Davis, brother of murder victim Debra Davis, cursed out a witness in the James "Whitey" Bulger trial on Monday.

Fireworks erupted again at the trial of James "Whitey" Bulger on Monday, this time after a witness suggested a victim's brother was a drug addict and an informant ? then backtracked when the man stood up and cursed him out.

"You're a [expletive] liar!" Steve Davis shouted at Stephen "The Rifleman" Flemmi in Boston Federal Court.

Flemmi, who was Bulger's partner in the Winter Hill Gang, said he'd made a mistake and was actually talking about one of Davis' brothers, Mickey, according to the Boston Globe.

Reuters/Jane Collins

Admitted killer Stephen 'The Rifleman' Flemmi on the witness stand in James 'Whitey' Bulger's trial, as seen in this courtroom sketch.

The Davises' sister, Debra, was dating Flemmi when she was strangled in 1981.

Flemmi ? who is serving life for 10 murders ? testified Friday that Bulger choked the life out of her with his bare hands because he thought she was a distraction and knew too much about his ties to a corrupt FBI agent.

Steve Davis, 55, has not missed a day of Bulger's trial since it began last month even though he says the testimony about his sister's murder has been gut-wrenching.

After Flemmi's testimony Friday, he told NBC News that it stung to hear the gruesome details again. But he was also troubled by Flemmi's testimony that Bulger thought Debra Davis' brother ? not named at the time ? was a rat.

"I know what I am," he said. "I never informed on anyone."

Bulger ? who is on trial for 19 murders and other crimes after spending 16 years on the lam ? shares Davis' distaste for the label of informant.

Earlier in the case, he hurled a profanity at a former agent who testified that the FBI recruited Bulger and Flemmi to dish on mobsters, and he aimed some four-letter words at ex-confederate Kevin Weeks after he told the jury Bulger, 83, was one of "the biggest rats."

After Monday's outburst, the judge told Davis he could stay in the courtroom if he quieted down so he was not available for immediate comment. A representative said no contact information was available for Mickey Davis.

It wasn't the first time Steve Davis had unloaded on Flemmi. When he was sentenced in 2003, Davis lost his temper and had to be escorted out of the courtroom.

Flemmi is one of the prosecution's last half-dozen witnesses. The defense has dozens more on its list and the trial is expected to last through the summer.

U.S. Department of Justice/ via Reuters

James "Whitey" Bulger in a booking photo.

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Portuguese President Backs Coalition

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Monday, July 22, 2013

A New Kind of Microchip Mimics the Human Brian in Real Time

A New Kind of Microchip Mimics the Human Brian in Real Time

A team of scientists in Switzerland has managed to cram 11,011 electrodes onto a single two-millimeter-by-two-millimeter piece of silicon to create a microchip that works just like an actual brain. The best part about this so-called neuromorphic chips? They can feel.

Read more...

    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/8XSFE-QfPW8/a-new-kind-of-microchip-mimics-the-human-brian-in-real-872326444

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Microsoft shares hit hard after profit badly misses expectations

Microsoft Corp. fell the most in more than four years after fourth-quarter profit missed analysts' projections by the biggest margin in at least a decade as demand weakens for Windows-run personal computers.

Results also were hurt by a $900 million writedown of Surface tablet inventory, shaving 7 cents a share from earnings. Excluding that, profit was 66 cents a share, Microsoft said Thursday, trailing analysts' 75-cent prediction.

Stung by a Surface device that few consumers want, the company faces a shift by consumers to mobile gadgets that offer many of the same features as laptops and desktops at lower prices.

CEO Steve Ballmer's effort to focus the company on devices and services may reduce profit as both areas carry thinner margins than traditional software.

"PCs were just uglier than people thought they would be, and people also had more Surface sales in there than there were," said Mark Moerdler, an analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. in New York, who rates Microsoft shares outperform.

Microsoft fell 11 percent to $31.40 at Friday's close in New York, the most since January 2009. The stock has gained 18 percent this year, compared with a 19 percent increase in the Standard & Poor's 500 Index.

PC shipments fell 11 percent last quarter, Framingham, Mass.-based IDC said. Surface, Microsoft's first-ever computer, shipped just 900,000 units in the last two quarters, IDC said.

Source: http://www.denverpost.com/business/ci_23696954/microsoft-shares-hit-hard-after-profit-badly-misses?source=rss

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Sunday, July 21, 2013

Hong Kong reporter quits in controversy over Alibaba founder's remarks

By Pete Sweeney

SHANGHAI (Reuters) - A Hong Kong journalist has quit in a controversy over disputed remarks that Jack Ma, founder of Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba Group, is reported to have made in support of Beijing's violent crackdown on Tiananmen Square protesters in 1989.

The controversy comes ahead of the anticipated listing of Alibaba, expected to value the firm at $60-$100 billion, which in turn has put a critical spotlight on Ma, the wider Chinese Internet industry and its approach to freedom of speech.

Ma denies he made such an assertion siding with the government and the journalist, too, has said her report for the South China Morning Post this month was changed in editing, and she has apologized to Ma. The daily, though, is standing behind the story.

In undisputed comments in the same report, Ma described the Chinese government as "terrific" and downplayed the significance of Internet censorship. But his disputed comments on the Tiananmen crackdown, a symbol for human rights campaigners of Beijing's intolerance of free speech, drew the biggest reaction.

The interview, published on July 13, has caused public criticism of Ma in the Hong Kong and foreign press, with some Chinese netizens calling for a boycott of Alibaba's e-commerce websites, including Alibaba.com and Taobao.com.

However, journalist Liu Yi, in a statement written in Chinese on her Facebook account, said the published version of the interview with Ma was not the same as her original submission, and that she later took the initiative to edit the online version herself to "set the record straight".

"Ma never intended to make any comments about politics," her statement said. "I solemnly apologize to Mr. Ma Yun (Jack Ma's Chinese name) and resign from the South China Morning Post."

Liu did not respond to a request for further comment made through her Facebook account.

The Post said in a statement on its web site dated Saturday that the reporter had accessed its system and replaced the editor-approved article with an altered version in which Ma's reference to Tiananmen was removed without authorization.

Its statement said that the editor-approved version was restored and that Liu Yi had been suspended, but she chose to resign on July 19 before an investigation had been completed.

Wang Xiangwei, editor-in-chief of the Post, did not respond immediately to requests for additional comment on Sunday or for a copy of the newspaper's recording of the interview.

The newspaper's statement said it stood behind the original published article, in which Ma appeared to endorse Deng Xiaoping, then China's paramount leader, in using violent force to crush the 1989 protests. In the article, Ma said:

"As CEO of a company, whether it be regarding the Alibaba incident (a 2011 incident involving fraud) or the spin-off of Alipay, it is like Deng Xiaoping on June 4th. As the country's most senior decision-maker, he had to be stable and he had to make cruel decisions. It was not the perfect decision, but it was the best decision, and it was the best decision at that time."

Florence Shih, of Alibaba Group's international corporate affairs department, said in an email to Reuters that the Post's version omitted a phrase that made it clear Ma was not referring to the Tiananmen crackdown but rather to his decision to ask for the resignation of Alibaba.com CEO David Wei in 2011 after a rise in fraudulent transactions at the firm's website.

Wei, now chairman of Vision Knight Capital in Shanghai, did not immediately respond to requests for comment sent to the company's email address or to his personal LinkedIn account.

A recording of the interview provided to Reuters by Alibaba appears to show that the Post's version of the quote did in fact omit a brief clause from Ma's original statement, although the conversation was difficult to hear clearly in the recording as Ma and the reporter were speaking at the same time.

"Just like I said last time, it was not the perfect decision but it was the best decision, and it was the best decision at that time," Ma can be heard to say.

Shih argued that the inclusion of "Just as I said last time" showed Ma was referring to his previous decision to demand Wei's resignation after it was found some Alibaba sales staff had been colluding with professional criminals to defraud buyers -- not Deng's decision to send the military in to quash protesters.

"This is at best rookie journalism and at worst is malicious," Shih wrote.

The Post did not respond immediately to requests for comment or for a copy of its own recorded version of the interview.

(Editing by Mark Bendeich)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/hong-kong-reporter-quits-controversy-over-alibaba-founders-152556964.html

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China brings goods and roads, now Africa wants jobs

Last updated at 5:50 am

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