This software is connected to the Azimuth Code Project's Experiments in El Nino analysis and prediction.
This converts netCDF files containing surface temperature data from NOAA (eg air.sig995.1951.nc) into a format more easily readable by other programs in other languages. You will need to edit it to your requirements:
- Change the working directory
- Change the ranges of latitude and longitude
- Change the range of years
As supplied, it converts 3 years for 4 grid points covering Scotland. I’ve put the Ludescher et al Pacific co-ordinates in comments. More instructions are in the script.
Then start R, and copy and paste the whole file into the R console. (There are other ways of running R scripts but this is simplest for novices).
Aimed at replicating Ludescher et al, 2013. As of 26 June 2014, it is close, but not identical. For an explanation see Part 4 of the El Niño Project series.
This file has the average link strength S as computed by ludescher.R
at 10-day intervals, starting from day 730 and going until day 12040, where day 1 is the first of January 1948. For an explanation see Part 4 of the El Niño Project series.
The second column in this file lists the average link strengths S as computed by ludescher.R
at 10-day intervals, starting from day 730, and going until day 24090, where day 1 is 1 January 1948. The first column numbers these items from 1 to 2337. For an explanation see Part 4 of the El Niño Project series.
The second column in this file lists the average link strengths S as computed by Blake Pollard using a modified version of ludescher.R
at daily intervals, starting from day 730 and going until day 24090, where day 1 is 1 January 1948. The first column numbers these items from 730 to 24090. For an explanation see Part 4 of the El Niño Project series.
The second column in this file lists the average link strengths S as computed by Blake Pollard using a modified version of ludescher.R
at monthly intervals, starting from January 1950 and going until December 2013. The first column numbers these items from 1 to 768. For an explanation see Part 4 of the El Niño Project series.
Makes maps of the Pacific, one per quarter from 1951 to 1979, showing covariances of grid points with the "Ludescher et al basin"