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Bob McDavitt's ideas for sailing weather around the South pacific

31 July 2022

Bob Blog 31 July

Bob Blog 31 July
Bob McDavitt's ideas for sailing around the South Pacific.
Disclaimer: Weather is a mix of pattern and chaos; these ideas are from the
patterned world.

Compiled Sunday 31 July 2022

Nature abhors a void "Horror Vacui"

This was the level of understanding prior to Galileo who in 1632 published
his Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems
(en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dialogue_Concerning_the_Two_Chief_World_Systems)

The following year this book was condemned by the Vatican but praised by
Evangelista Torricelli, one of his young students (then 25 years old).

Evangelista was the son of some poor textile workers, and was sent as a lad
to his uncle, a monk, for training. At age 16 his father died, and his uncle
sent him to Rome under the tutelage of Benedictine monk Benedetto Castelli.
Castelli was a student of Galileo and also entrusted by Pope Urban VII with
hydraulic experiments. This combination is what led him to the invention of
the barometer in 1643. His name lives on in the naming of the metric unit
for absolute pressure TORR.

Here is how Torricelli invented the barometer. Galileo observed that a
common suction pump could not raise water to a greater height than about 10m
(32 ft). He considered that the "abhorrence" was limited to 32 ft and
discussed this with Torricelli. After Galileo's death in 1642 Torricelli
asked what if we live in a "sea of air" that has weight and exerts pressure
like water. The suction pump lifts water up a tube - the piston closes off
access to air pressure at the top of the tube, but the air still pushes down
on the surface of the water outside the tube. This push causes the water to
rise until the weight of the lifted water equals the weight of the air push.

Now Evangelista had access to large vats of mercury in the lab basement
collected by students heating local rocks with Bunsen burners. He knew the
weight of mercury is 13 times heavier than water so that would reduce the
height of the lifted column from 10m to 76 cm. He asked a glass maker to
produce a glass tube about a quarter of an inch in diameter and 4ft. long,
and hermetically sealed one of its ends; he then filled it with mercury and,
applying his finger to the open end, inverted it in a basin containing
mercury. When he released his finger, some mercury sank into the basin, but
a column remained in the tube nearly 76cm (30inches) above the surface of
the mercury in the basin. Also, at the top of the tube was a vacuum, the
first ever humanly produced sustainable vacuum, which is now called the
Torricellian vacuum. This experiment is sometimes known as the Torricellian
experiment.


The following year he wrote up this experiment in a letter to Cardinal
Michelangelo Ricci that "We live submerged at the bottom of an ocean of air"

He died 3 years later maybe from typhoid.

A thorough write up on this experiment can be found at
galileo.imss.firenze.it/vuoto/eprota.html
(Original is in Italian but has an English translation).

Stay tuned to see how this led to the barometer and then to weather
forecasting.

TROPICS
FRANK and GEORGETTE are west of Mexico and SONGDA is near Korea.

WEATHER ZONES
The SPCZ is active in the Coral Sea to Vanuatu.
Convergence zone slow-moving near Fiji on Monday and Tuesday.
A convergence zone CZ is expected to linger between Samoa and Just south of
French Polynesia.
A passing trough is expected to form over New Caledonia on Tuesday and then
travel east forming L1 between Fiji and NZ on Wednesday. L1 then moves SE
and fades. Avoid L1. Associated trough crossing Fiji/Tonga at weekend.
OK to travel from Tahiti to Fiji this week but take a northern path to avoid
the heavier swells in the south, and maybe aim to cross that CZ near Samoa.

HIGHS and LOWS
High H1 across northern NZ on Monday expected to travel east along 35S with
a squash zone at around 25S.

L2 is deep in Australian Bight early this week and expected to travel east
along 45S reaching southern NZ by end of week. Constant moist NW winds for
NZ Alps this week, strong until mid-week.

H2 forming in Tasman Sea by mid-week is expected to cross northern NZ this
weekend.

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If you would like more detail for your voyage, then check metbob.com to see
what I offer.
Or Facebook at /www.facebook.com/metbobnz/
Weathergram with graphics is at metbob.wordpress.com (subscribe/unsubscribe
at bottom).
Weathergram archive (with translator) is at weathergram.blogspot.co.nz.
Contact is bob@metbob.com or txt 64277762212
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