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Scientists develop new technique to predict wildfires 18/11/2013
While wildfires can be caused by natural events, they often burn out of control and may get to a point where they become uncontrollable. Despite their sparks of uncertainty and paths of destruction, researchers have found a way to predict wildfire growth through the lifetime of their blazes.
 
Scientists at the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) in Boulder, Colorado, and the University of Maryland, have developed a technique that combines cutting-edge simulations of the interaction of weather and fire with newly available satellite observations of active wildfires. This is the first time computer modeling offers the promise of continually-updated daylong predictions.
 
Updated with new observations every 12 hours, the computer model forecasts critical details such as the extent of a blaze and changes in its behavior.
 
Over the last decade, NCAR scientist Janice Coen, the lead paper author and model developer, has developed a tool, known as the Coupled Atmosphere-Wildland Fire Environment (CAWFE) computer model, that connects how weather drives fires and, in turn, how fires create their own weather.
 
Using CAWFE, she successfully simulated the details of how large fires grow.
 
However simulations need the most updated data because there are so many factors that can change the size and path of a wildfire. This is where satellite instruments come into play.
 
Coen's co-author, Wilfrid Schroeder of the University of Maryland, produced higher-resolution fire detection data from a new satellite instrument, the Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite (VIIRS), jointly operated by NASA and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
 
The new tool provides coverage of the entire globe at intervals of 12 hours or less, with pixels about 1,200 feet across. The higher resolution enabled the two researchers to outline the active fire perimeter in much greater detail.
 
The researchers said that forecasts using the new technique could be particularly useful in anticipating sudden blowups and shifts in the direction of the flames.
 
 
 
 
 
 
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