🚨 SOMETHING MASSIVE IS BREWING BENEATH THE PACIFIC AND... IT COULD TRIGGER A MONSTER EL NIÑO. New 3D ARMOR data reveals a giant subsurface heat reservoir in the Pacific with temperature anomalies reaching +6°C below the surface far deeper and stronger than normal. This is not surface warming. This is the Pacific’s internal heat engine loading up with enormous energy. If powerful Westerly Wind Bursts push this heat upward, the surface response could explode into +3°C to +4°C territory creating a hybrid Super El Niño unlike anything we’ve seen in decades. Why this matters: • A monster El Niño would bring extreme heat, crop failures, chaotic rainfall, floods, droughts, and global weather disruption • The heat is already there — it just needs the right trigger to rise • This is atmosphere-ocean physics operating at full power, not “nature taking revenge” • Monitoring shows the system is primed and ready The deeper implication is alarming: We may be watching the early stages of one of the most powerful El Niño events in modern history forming right now beneath the waves. If this heat vents upward… the consequences could be felt worldwide for years. What do you think are we heading into dangerous new climate territory, or will the system stay contained? Follow for more frontier science and planetary discoveries.show more

TheNewPhysics
95,746 Aufrufe • vor 22 Tagen
Big dawg El Niño coming this summer and fall!... This is a bit science-y… but easy I promise. So follow along. You are looking at a vertical cross section of the tropical Pacific Ocean at the Equator with depth downward deep into the ocean. Left side is west near Asia. Right side is east near South America. It’s where we measure El Niño, the king control knob of the climate. One main way we know it’s coming is “subsurface heat”. See the dark red shades moving east under the surface and rising upward? That’s the El Niño developing! El Niño is a build up of hotter than normal water on the surface Eastern Tropical Pacific Ocean. What’s cool (or hot) is that the water comes from the West Tropical Pacific. During cool La Niña years it’s like a piggy bank. The West Pacific hoards and stores the heat near Asia. Then every couple-few years that warm water sloshes back East. It first appears under the surface where we measure it. It surfaces in late spring and El Niño grows in Summer to fall. You can tell by the magnitude of warm subsurface water that this looks like a biggie! So how will it impact us? For one, it typically subdues Atlantic hurricane season. That doesn’t mean no storms - just less active than it would have otherwise been. Also it releases lots of Heat… so it super charges heat waves around the planet and floods too - it all tends to be more immense and intense. And you can bet Earth will experience its hottest days on record coming later 2026 into 2027. El Niño is one of the biggest climate forces on Earth and it has a profound impact on world-wide weather because of all the heat released into the atmosphere from the ocean.show more

Jeff Berardelli
11,742 Aufrufe • vor 3 Monaten
Genesis of a Super El Niño! Why do we... expect this El Niño to be one of the strongest on record? - A main reason: Huge subsurface heat - exceeding most anything we’ve observed in spring - motoring eastward from the deep Western Tropical Pacific Ocean to the East Pacific and emerging at the surface. This is rapidly warming the El Niño region. This is how El Niño forms - it’s not new, it’s just supercharged. This matches most computer model forecasts for a historic El Niño pattern, throwing Earth’s climate patterns off-kilter. Expect robust effects of El Niño to begin this summer and maximize this fall and winter. The aim of the visual is to help people orient to subsurface views, tough to do without a frame of reference. Credit to Alex Boreham for the animating map inlay. #elnino #science #stem #climateshow more

Jeff Berardelli
14,185 Aufrufe • vor 27 Tagen
Monster subsurface heat bubble and associated “downwelling Kelvin wave”... is traversing the deep Pacific, transporting anomalously warm water from the West Pacific Warm Pool towards the East Equatorial Pacific, and emerging toward to surface. This mechanism should provide the boost to jump start our El Niño which is defined by surface warming in the eastern half of the deep tropical Pacific. All signs are pointing to a top tier El Niño episode this summer/ fall/ winter - emitting pent up ocean heat - throwing Worldwide weather patterns into overdrive! In ENSO terms, a downwelling Kelvin wave often happens after westerly wind bursts in the western or central Pacific. The wave carries warm water eastward below the surface, deepens the thermocline in the east, reduces cold-water upwelling (ie. near the Galapagos), and can help favor El Niño development. Thanks to CyclonicWx for the great map visual. #elninoshow more

Jeff Berardelli
49,306 Aufrufe • vor 2 Monaten
El Niño is born! Destined to be the biggest... in 150 years +?? NOAA declares: El Niño Advisory This morning conditions in the Eastern Pacific met the criteria for El Niño. This means Sea Surface Temps reached a certain level above normal, and the ocean and atmosphere “coupled” meaning they are now working in tandem to produce impacts. This event is widely advertised by models to be potentially the strongest on record. El Niño takes very hot water stored in the deep tropical west Pacific, pushing it east and up to the surface, lofting that heat into the atmosphere, which supercharges weather events and throws the climate off-kilter. This typical means more intense heatwaves & floods, but also it restrains the Atlantic hurricane season. So its impacts are both good and bad. One thing seems virtually certain: the heat released into the atmosphere will make for some unprecedented events through 2027, and on top of longterm warming, the hottest global temperatures in many tens of 1000s of years. #ElNino #florida #storm #heatwave #flood #droughtshow more

Jeff Berardelli
165,306 Aufrufe • vor 11 Tagen
2027 will almost certainly be the warmest year on... record for Earth - by a long shot - and perhaps even 2026 may reach a record too. That’s due to the big boost of heat released from El Niño, on top of the long term warming. This happens as excess heat stored deep in the west tropical Pacific moves east and towards the ocean surface. When it reaches the surface the extra energy sparks thunderstorms and powers a strong subtropical jetstream. That combination releases tons of heat into the air and powers extreme weather all around the planet. As a result, the planet’s surface temperature will warm up significantly, pushing us past (probably far past) the record set in 2024. Worth noting that the planet’s warmest 10 years on record are indeed the last 10 years. And that the Earth is likely warmer now than it’s been in at least 120,000 years. #elnino #heatwave #extremeweather #science #stemshow more

Jeff Berardelli
47,343 Aufrufe • vor 1 Monat
Hurricanes and wildfire: #hawaii #maui #wildfire #LahainaFire The winds... brought the power poles and transformers down, that sparked fires, communications went down, then 80MPH gusts fanned the flames across the landscape. A perfect storm… but why?! If you look at the National Interagency Fire Center’s Predictive Services, which we have been covering, they knew Hawaii would be ready for significant fire growth as far back at Spring. “El Niño will be the driving factor.” There was a La Niña/El Niño switch this spring… El Niño has developed in the equatorial Pacific Ocean, and rapid warming continues in much of the ENSO region, especially in the central Pacific with continued anomalous warmth off the coast of South America. Above normal sea surface temperatures are observed in all ENSO regions. Most forecast guidance depicts continued warming through summer, with El Niño conditions forecast to continue into winter. The Climate Prediction Center forecasts a greater than 95% chance of El Niño conditions continuing into winter, with a 56% chance of a strong El Niño developing this fall. Other teleconnection patterns, such as the Madden Julian Oscillation (MJO), Pacific Decadal Oscillation, and Pacific-North American Pattern may influence weather and climate during the outlook period, but El Niño will be the main driver…show more

The Hotshot Wake Up
3,699,175 Aufrufe • vor 2 Jahren
🌎 NOAA has officially declared the onset of El... Niño El Niño is the warm phase of ENSO, during which surface waters in the central and eastern tropical Pacific become warmer than usual. As the distribution of warm water in the Pacific shifts, atmospheric circulation also changes, including the position of the jet stream and storm tracks. This can influence temperatures and rainfall thousands of kilometres away. Current seasonal forecasts suggest that El Niño will continue to strengthen through the rest of the year. According to NOAA, there is a 60% chance that sea surface temperature anomalies in the central and eastern tropical Pacific will exceed 2 °C by the end of the year. This episode could therefore become very strong and rank among the strongest events on record. Typical impacts of El Niño: • globally: an increase in the planet’s average temperature • more rainfall: western and southern South America, parts of East Africa, and the southern United States • drier conditions: northern and eastern Australia, Indonesia, parts of Southeast Asia, southern Africa, and parts of Central America • South Asia: the southwest monsoon is often weaker • tropical cyclones: less favourable conditions in the Atlantic, a more active eastern and central Pacific, and typhoon formation in the western North Pacific often shifting farther eastshow more

Windy.com
42,717 Aufrufe • vor 10 Tagen
Tuesday, April 14, 2026 at 6:52 AM: What you... have witnessed yesterday and this past weekend across California and parts of Southern California is the birth pains of an El Niño development and the ongoing escalation the warming of the Pacific torrential rains came through the San Fernando Valley with such strong, thunderstorms that it caused significant flooding in the Sherman Oaks, Universal City area around 1:05 PM - 1:35 PM yesterday on April 13, 2026. This powerful storm packed winds gusts of over 50 mph and it’s a true testament that we are no longer in a pattern that brings rain in just winter time but is now extending into April and May and beyond with that said we have another storm on the heels that will be arriving very quickly on April 21 - 27, 2026. The next storm will also bring more heavy rain, thunder, and lightning, and yes, more snowfall to the local mountains. As the Pacific continues to warm, the weather will become more drastic with extreme heat waves and more unusual severe rain events for California. This situation will get quite scary if it continues to verify by the end of October and November with the super El Niño development and the atmosphere connecting something that we’ve not seen since 1982, 1997/ 1998. The main Marshall Islands low axis is already gearing up for this major event this year which you’ve seen an example already. The flooding in the Hawaiian islands. Typhoon Sinlaku has now hit the Guam region with a category five status this early in April all due to the warming of the Pacific and the emergence of El Niño. #CAwxshow more

Jason D Farhang
28,602 Aufrufe • vor 2 Monaten
This is what happens when industrial civilization continues to... heat the globe at an unprecedented rate - it creates the conditions for the accelerated destruction of forest ecosystems. More than 80 #Wildfires in #Alberta - this is anything but normal - this is the new climate.show more

Peter Dynes
115,639 Aufrufe • vor 3 Jahren
In Finland, a new generation of energy-efficient data centers... is transforming how cities manage heat. Data centers have transformed urban heat management by recovering waste heat from servers and funneling it into the country's extensive district heating networks. This innovative system turns an energy byproduct into a vital resource, significantly reducing reliance on fossil fuels for heating. This ingenious solution addresses two major challenges: the growing energy demands of data storage and urban heating needs. Instead of releasing heat into the environment, Finland’s system recycles it, creating a closed-loop energy network that benefits both technology and society.show more

Massimo
704,402 Aufrufe • vor 6 Monaten
Indeed but no surprise here because we’re having the... heat now followed by rain potential! That’s what happened in March and look what April brought. So let’s see how this next situation evolves especially with the warming of the Pacific continuing and the emergence of El Niño.show more

Jason D Farhang
49,604 Aufrufe • vor 1 Monat
Wednesday June 3, 2026, 11:20 AM: Say hello to... “Amanda” our first named system of Eastern Pacific Hurricane Season 2026. She will not affect the Southwest US at all. This is just the start of hurricane season more are coming in the upcoming 6 weeks especially with the ongoing warming of the Pacific and the El Niño pattern and more significant warmth in the equatorial Pacific taking center stage by late August 2026. #CAwx #hurricaneseasonshow more

Jason D Farhang
34,251 Aufrufe • vor 19 Tagen
Using a propane blow torch on plastic is a... common hack to restore the finish This works because the heat slightly melts the surface, which smooths out scratches and scuffs. It gives it a refreshed “new” glossy look This is widely used on plastic trims on trucks If you don’t move the flame quickly and evenly then too much heat in one spot will melt, warp and burn holes in the plastic It works best on polyethylene or polypropylene bed liners It does release fumes that can be dangerousshow more

Wall Street Apes
732,272 Aufrufe • vor 22 Tagen
The atmosphere is a fluid and it's all connected.... Waves of energy ripple through the upper levels as the jet stream with ridges (heat domes) and troughs (cool pools). We see TransAtlantic ridging and then most prominent is the giant heat dome that builds across the US next week.show more

Jeff Berardelli
291,988 Aufrufe • vor 2 Jahren
#Hurricaneerin is hungry. It will feast on hot water... up to 88 degrees. After using this heat to power its engine, it will dissipate said heat. Leaving a cool ocean wake in its path, ~10 degrees lower than it found it. The water cools not just due to heat absorption, but also overturning /upwelling, wind and rain.show more

Jeff Berardelli
692,422 Aufrufe • vor 10 Monaten
Europe is melting! The size, intensity, and longevity of... this #heatwave is enormous. Peak temperatures will reach 45°C / 100-115°F this week in #France . You are looking at temperature anomalies in the cloud layer over the next 2 weeks, which peak at +20°C. #Europe is Earth’s fastest warming continent, and European heat extremes are increasing faster than models project they should, likely due to changes in steering flow. In a rapid attribution study by Climameter it is estimated that #climatechange has made this June heatwave up to 4°C hotter (7°F) than it would have otherwise been without warming.show more

Jeff Berardelli
84,073 Aufrufe • vor 7 Stunden
Ireland has just experienced the highest rainfall events ever... recorded, resulting in widespread flooding. A 1°C temp rise = ~7% more moisture in the atmosphere. At ~1.5°C global warming, that sponge is saturated, expect huge droughts & record floods onwards in this new climate.show more

Peter Dynes
38,521 Aufrufe • vor 11 Monaten
China Takes Cinema to an Extraordinary Level The use... of 5D effects in a Chinese cinema made some viewers genuinely believe the fire in the film was real 🔥 Smoke, heat, vibrations, and even wind effects… the experience transforms watching into something akin to being right there in the action. But the question is: if you felt the heat of the fire and smelled the smoke around you… would you finish the film or be the first to run away? 😅show more

China pulse 🇨🇳
37,545 Aufrufe • vor 1 Monat
SPAIN'S MASSIVE POWER OUTAGE A "RARE METEOROLOGICAL EVENT"... SOMETHING... SEEMS FISHY HERE... Not sure if you're buying this but I just don't see how a somewhat normal nighttime to daytime temperature delta could create a *RARE* event? The massive #SpainBlackout is being blamed on an "induced atmospheric vibration." How does an anomalous oscillations in the countries voltage lines be caused without wind/storms/ or an overload due to extreme heat (NONE OF THIS EXISTED)? Even if the cause was #InducedAtmosphericVibration The effect is usually humming and dipping of power. What you see below wouldn't suggest a MASSIVE outage unless the power grid is so weakened that it's that susceptible. Then the easy blame is weather-related.show more

Mike Masco
17,839 Aufrufe • vor 1 Jahr
It feels kind of bananas that we can watch... an El Niño forming live as it happens. This is sea surface temperature anomaly data. Keep your eye on the west coast of South America, and how the current on the equator starts by flowing away, but then reverses and flows towards land and builds a bank of hot surface water (yellow).show more

tern
21,067 Aufrufe • vor 25 Tagen