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The solar eclipse: a natural meteorological experiment

journal contribution
posted on 2023-10-29, 11:28 authored by R. Giles Harrison, Edward HannaEdward Hanna
<p>A solar eclipse provides a well-characterized reduction in solar radiation, of calculable amount and duration. This captivating natural astronomical phenomenon is ideally suited to science outreach activities, but the predictability of the change in solar radiation also provides unusual conditions for assessing the atmospheric response to a known stimulus. Modern automatic observing networks used for weather forecasting and atmospheric research have dense spatial coverage, so the quantitative meteorological responses to an eclipse can now be evaluated with excellent space and time resolution. Numerical models representing the atmosphere at high spatial resolution can also be used to predict eclipse-related changes and interpret the observations. Combining the models with measurements yields the elements of a controlled atmospheric experiment on a regional scale (10–1000?km), which is almost impossible to achieve by other means. This modern approach to ‘eclipse meteorology’ as identified here can ultimately improve weather prediction models and be used to plan for transient reductions in renewable electricity generation. During the 20 March 2015 eclipse, UK electrical energy demand increased by about 3?GWh (11?TJ) or about 4%, alongside reductions in the wind and photovoltaic electrical energy generation of 1.5?GWh (5.5?TJ).</p>

History

School affiliated with

  • Department of Geography (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences

Volume

374

Issue

2077

Pages/Article Number

20150225

Publisher

The Royal Society

ISSN

1364–503X

eISSN

1471-2962

Date Submitted

2017-02-01

Date Accepted

2016-05-23

Date of First Publication

2016-08-22

Date of Final Publication

2016-09-28

Date Document First Uploaded

2017-02-01

ePrints ID

25925

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