Daily Trust

NASA predicts heavier rain in Nigeria, tropics

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NASA scientists in a new study of climate change said the latest predictive climate models underestim­ate future levels of precipitat­ion in Nigeria and other places in the tropics.

The tropics are a region of the Earth surroundin­g the equator. The tropics are also referred to as the tropical zone and the Torrid Zone.

NASA data suggests the tropics will host fewer tall, high-altitude clouds as global warming continues, boosting rainfall totals in the region.

Under different circumstan­ces, fewer clouds would likely translate to less precipitat­ion. But tall tropical clouds help trap heat in the atmosphere. Without fewer of them around, the air above the tropics is expected to cool. Cooler air means more rain.

But the confusing changes don’t stop there. The increase in rain is expected to reheat the atmosphere. As raindrops condense, they transfer energy to their surroundin­gs, warming the atmosphere. The cycle of heating and cooling encourages large-scale air flows.

In the tropics, the pattern is known as the atmospheri­c general circulatio­n. Scientists have measured a narrowing of the cycle as Earth has warmed in recent decades, depressing the number of high-altitude clouds. An increase in rainfall is expected to encourage the cycle’s narrowing pattern.

Scientists at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory designed number of a models to replicate the loss of high altitude clouds measured by NASA satellites over the last several decades. The models that best matched NASA’s dataset predicted an accelerati­on of rainfall in the region.

Researcher­s published their findings in the journal Nature Communicat­ions.

“This study provides a pathway for improving prediction­s of future precipitat­ion change,” lead study author Hui Su, a researcher at JPL, said in a news release. (NAN)

 ?? Photo: NAN ?? Some terminated staff of Ahmadu Bello University (ABU) Zaria, after the Court of Appeal sitting in Abuja adjourned the university’s appeal to stall the payment of N2.5bn to the 110 terminated workers. The workers, who were sacked in 1996, had sued the...
Photo: NAN Some terminated staff of Ahmadu Bello University (ABU) Zaria, after the Court of Appeal sitting in Abuja adjourned the university’s appeal to stall the payment of N2.5bn to the 110 terminated workers. The workers, who were sacked in 1996, had sued the...

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