El Nino We live on a very large planet. More wider than the size of the earth is the change and relationship between human beings, animals, the environment, the weather, and the influence of everyone. Many times, busy schedule and modern lifestyle, we forget the interaction between concept and number of ideas. We do not recognize that certain weather events in the Pacific will affect daily in the United States. El Nino phenomenon is one of the greatest scientific phenomena scientists have explored.
What is the influence of the El Niño phenomenon to the United States? The El Nino phenomenon affects the great winter airflow in the eastern North Pacific and North America. There are considerable variations in the characteristics of the ElNiño event from event to event, and in some areas the impact may vary from event to event. However, especially with regard to El Nino 's strong events, the influence of some parts of the United States is fairly consistent and predictable. Generally, ElNiño will be as follows.
It is not El Niño either. Please do not persuade someone that in 2015 it was a record year thanks to El Nino. Without ElNiño, this would be a record year. The El Nino phenomenon affects the climate of the Western hemisphere every few years. This is a very complex phenomenon, the Earth experiences the harsh warm weather - El Niño - and then enters the cooling period called Lanina. In the past few years, we were in La Niña era. Despite the continuing addition of carbon dioxide to the atmosphere, resistance to climate change is taking advantage of this opportunity to claim that climate change has stopped in some way. In the climate change problem, the Senate will throw a dramatic curve ball in the form of an actual snowball in 2015 with a self-righteous and familiar scientific appeal, and one of many blizzards that broke the record in 2015 I was suffering.
In order to understand the typical influence that El Niño phenomenon gives to the area, we examine the climate database to see the trends observed in past El Niño winter compared with Lanina and ENSO neutral winter. This comparison is shown in the box below and whisker for the climate sector # 24 covering most of the central and eastern part of Illinois. Boxplot diagrams show the percentage range (left) and temperature (right) of precipitation for three different ENSO categories. Data is from 1950 - 2010. For information on how to read the boxes and beard maps, please click here.