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We couldn’t always predict the weather. It took huge strides in physics, atmospheric science, computer science and engineering to connect the dots between what’s going on in the sky at any given moment to whether we’ll have a rainstorm next week. And that effort has become bigger: more international and more expensive, involving supercomputers, the International Space Station, satellites and advanced models. Amy Choi talks to Andrew Blum, author of “The Weather Machine.”
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We couldn’t always predict the weather. It took huge strides in physics, atmospheric science, computer science and engineering to connect the dots between what’s going on in the sky at any given moment to whether we’ll have a rainstorm next week. And that effort has become bigger: more international and more expensive, involving supercomputers, the International Space Station, satellites and advanced models. Amy Choi talks to Andrew Blum, author of “The Weather Machine.”

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