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A new climate study was just being released that had the potential to brush out the global warming we’re experiencing like so many eraser crumbs on notebook paper, revealing what might be our future if the ambient warming wasn’t part of the equation: much more extreme regional happenings. The model also forecasts Arctic Ocean warming as high as 5°C and intense rainfall strengthening over areas such as the Himalayas, Andes, and eastern Asia. This jump in detail, made possible by high-powered simulations, provides sharper tools to adapt to local climates, plan energy needs, and prepare for disasters — especially in places like small island nations and mountain communities that are already feeling the effects of climate change and rely on cell towers more than landlines.

Supercomputing Climate Model Unveils Regional Extremes Under 1°C Global Warming

As per a report published in Earth System Dynamics, the breakthrough was made by researchers from the IBS Centre for Climate Physics in South Korea and the Alfred Wegener Institute in Germany. They employed the AWI-CM3 Earth system model, running it on South Korea’s top supercomputers to simulate climate conditions at 9 km atmospheric and 4–25 km ocean resolution—far finer than the ~100 km resolution models commonly used by the IPCC.

The weather forecast now takes into account region-specific patterns never studied before: local conditions on islands, types of oceanfront rain, and the way turbulence forms in ocean eddies. Warming is expected to intensify at a rate 45%–60% higher than the global mean in high mountain ranges, including the Hindu Kush and Andes. In Siberian and Canadian Arctic regions, temperatures may rise by about 2°C under a 1°C global average increase.

The researchers also predict increased climate fluctuations. El Niño, La Niña, and the Madden Julian Oscillation (MJO) will increase, and the state of both phenomena will be on a faster track with larger frequency and impact, which will cause a great number of days with heavy rain (rainfall > 50 mm/day). That motion could trigger floods and landslides in heavily populated and environmentally delicate areas.

And for that insight to be actionable, the lab has created an interactive tool that is basically maps of climate projections in the form of data overlaid on Google Earth. These datasets are vital for policymakers who build solar & wind infrastructure & develop disaster response & water management plans in varied geographies.

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Comet C/2025 K1 (ATLAS) Breaks Into Three Pieces Following Close Approach to the Sun

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NASA’s fractured comet C/2025 K1 (ATLAS) dazzled stargazers on Monday night, offering a rare live view of a cosmic object breaking apart after a close encounter with the Sun. The livestream, organised by the Virtual Telescope Project, began at 10 p.m. EST on November 24 (0300 GMT on November 25) and will broadcast telescopic views of the comet’s multiple large fragmen…

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James Webb Telescope May Have Discovered Universe’s Earliest Supermassive Black Hole

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James Webb may have discovered the universe’s earliest supermassive black hole in galaxy GHZ2. Observations reveal high-energy emission lines, challenging existing models of rapid black hole and galaxy growth. Upcoming JWST and ALMA studies aim to confirm AGN activity and refine our understanding of early cosmic evolution.

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NASA’s Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope Surpassing Expectations Even Before Launch, Reveals Research

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NASA’s upcoming Roman Space Telescope is expected to measure seismic waves in over 300,000 red giant stars, far greater than early predictions. These signals will help scientists better understand exoplanet systems and the Milky Way’s ancient core. Researchers say Roman’s natural survey design enables this breakthrough even before the telescope has launched.

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