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I just looked at the weather.com information for Fitchburg, MA.
The report shows the current temperature (actually, the 7:52 PM temperature) as 81 degrees. Looking at the hourly forecast, the 9 PM temperature is predicted to be 71 degrees, 68 at 10 PM, and so on. I've checked the weather reports for a few local towns several times today, and the situation was always the same: The current temperature has been much higher than the series of temperature predictions in the hourly forecast. And today isn't unique -- I've seen that happen many times with errors in both directions. My question is: How can this happen? I can understand how distant forecasts can be off, but shouldn't the current temperature be a strong factor in short-term temperature prediction? Thanks for any insight. B.J. -- B.J. Herbison / / http://www.herbison.com/herbison/bj.html The Next Asylum / 203 Long Hill Road / Bolton, MA 01740-1421 / +1 978 634-1061 -- This article was auto-posted by the ne.weather.moderated Weatherbot program. The author is solely responsible for its content. ne.weather.moderated FAQ/Charter: http://www.panix.com/~newm/faq.txt ne.weather.moderated moderators e-mail: (Please put "wx" or "weather" in the subject line to avoid the spam block.) |
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