Jim Tang (@wxmann) 's Twitter Profile
Jim Tang

@wxmann

At the intersection of weather, tech, art, and math. Building @chase_archive

ID: 15488142

linkhttps://linktr.ee/wxmann calendar_today19-07-2008 00:08:27

75,75K Tweet

26,26K Followers

2,2K Following

Tornado Archive (@torarchive) 's Twitter Profile Photo

2024 was a very busy year for tornadoes in the US, so it's taken a while to get all the data processed. We're in the final stages of this, and the 2024 US data will hopefully be released soon. We're also working on getting updated European data from ESWD, hopefully this summer.

2024 was a very busy year for tornadoes in the US, so it's taken a while to get all the data processed. We're in the final stages of this, and the 2024 US data will hopefully be released soon. We're also working on getting updated European data from ESWD, hopefully this summer.
David Perell (@david_perell) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Writing on Twitter taught me that how you say something is just as important as what you say. “Best idea wins” sounds compelling, but it ain’t true. Comedians win. Storytellers win. Marketers win. Substance needs style to pierce the culture.

Mathieu (@miniapeur) 's Twitter Profile Photo

I believe the hardest part of mathematics (and pretty any other discipline) is developing intuition. You can memorise and use definitions and theorems, but that doesn't mean you really understand them. It takes time to develop an intuition around mathematical concepts and it can

I believe the hardest part of mathematics (and pretty any other discipline) is developing intuition. You can memorise and use definitions and theorems, but that doesn't mean you really understand them. It takes time to develop an intuition around mathematical concepts and it can
Jim Tang (@wxmann) 's Twitter Profile Photo

One of the peculiar things I've found about the Floyd, NM event was that the supercell responsible for the tornado crossed a *sinking* boundary that dropped temps 10ºF in Clovis in the hour before the tornado. Modifying the representative sounding for that event from 82º to 75º

One of the peculiar things I've found about the Floyd, NM event was that the supercell responsible for the tornado crossed a *sinking* boundary that dropped temps 10ºF in Clovis in the hour before the tornado.

Modifying the representative sounding for that event from 82º to 75º
Jim Tang (@wxmann) 's Twitter Profile Photo

This upcoming week would have S-tier tornado potential if not for infusion of garbage mid-level lapse rates from the tropics 🥲

Jonathan Gorard (@getjonwithit) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Calling c the "speed of light" completely misses the point. Rather, c is the "spacetime exchange rate": how many units of space you can exchange for one unit of time. In actuality, everything travels at the "speed of light", just not necessarily through space alone... (1/4)

Calling c the "speed of light" completely misses the point. Rather, c is the "spacetime exchange rate": how many units of space you can exchange for one unit of time.

In actuality, everything travels at the "speed of light", just not necessarily through space alone... (1/4)
Vincent Ledvina (@vincent_ledvina) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Little ramble, but here's what we need for widespread aurora tomorrow night in North America: 1. The CME needs to be strong enough to last until nightfall. Right now it's predicted to impact around 7 am +/- 7 hr CDT. A wimpy CME impact may die out by the time NA is in darkness

Jim Tang (@wxmann) 's Twitter Profile Photo

One of the proudest photos I captured this year... have always struggled with sprite photography and finally, on a warm May night in TX, I got the clear, crisp, naked-eye visible sprite I've been looking ages for... Hoping for more sky lights of all kinds this week! #txwx

One of the proudest photos I captured this year... have always struggled with sprite photography and finally, on a warm May night in TX, I got the clear, crisp, naked-eye visible sprite I've been looking ages for...  

Hoping for more sky lights of all kinds this week!

#txwx
Jure Atanackov (@jatanackov) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The (only) three CMEs that impacted the Earth at 1000+ km/s that I remember in the last 25 years: 1. The Bastille Day event (16 July 2000) G5 storm. The CME was launched by an X8.2 flare. Transit time was 28 hours. WIND detected solar wind speeds up to ~1000-1100 km/s. 2. The