Blogs
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Jackson Tan's Maldives research: entry 1
13 October 2011
Finally, touch down. It has been a rather long flight, eight hours from Melbourne to Singapore, five hours from Singapore to Male, the capital of the Republic of Maldives, and another two hours from Male to Gan, where the DYNAMO field campaign is being conducted. |
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Jackson Tan's Maldives research: entry 2
14 October 2011
The towering cumulonimbus cloud is a signature of deep convection. Indeed, cloud structure is intimately related to the convective activity in the region, especially so in the tropics with intense solar radiation and humidity in the air. |
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Jackson Tan's Maldives research: entry 5
24 October 2011
One of the tasks involved in fieldwork is the daily summary report, where we record qualitatively the general meteorological activity and interesting events observed by the instruments. |
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Jackson Tan's Maldives research: entry 8
02 November 2011
I've previously mentioned an ARM (Atmospheric Radiation Measurement) Mobile Facility (AMF) deployment at the Gan International Airport by the US Department of Energy. |
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Jackson Tan's Maldives research: entry 9
03 November 2011
The radars deployed here on Gan Island run 24/7 until the end of the DYNAMO field campaign in March next year. Consequently, every day is a working day. This is the nature of fieldwork. |
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Jackson Tan's Maldives research: entry 10
09 November 2011
And so here I am in the Male International Airport, waiting to board my plane back home. It was a wild ride on the 50-seater from Gan to Male, though I should've expected that from radar and satellite images revealing intense convective activity there over the past few days. |
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