Weather forecast100 years ago - when the weather became predictable

Pascal Schürmann

 · 01.04.2022

Weather forecast: 100 years ago - when the weather became predictablePhoto: Lewis F. Richardson
Richardson came up with the idea of dividing the world into regions and calculating a forecast for each one separately - depending on the neighbouring region. Today, sailors know this as grids
In 1922, Lewis Richardson was the first to describe how weather patterns could be reliably predicted. His findings are still valid today. A tribute - now available as a PDF download

The man was a genius. And he fared like many geniuses: because he was far ahead of his time, his extraordinary abilities and the resulting findings were held in low esteem during his lifetime. Yet one hundred years ago, the Briton Lewis Fry Richardson created nothing less than the mathematical foundations on which every modern weather forecasting model is based today.

His formula work, which he published at Cambridge University in 1922, was so extensive that only a few other people were able to understand it at the time. But even then, Richardson was deeply convinced of his findings: he had found a way to not only provide the world with up-to-date weather data, but also a scientifically sound forecast for the next day - a novelty at the time.

However, several decades had to pass before Richardson's calculations could be utilised. The computer had yet to be invented. And even the world's first mainframe computer still needed a whole day in 1950 to produce a weather forecast using Richardson's formulae.

But who was this man and how did he become a brilliant inventor, tinkerer, maths and physics genius? Richardson had already invented a forward-looking echo sounder. He discovered the phenomenon of air turbulence at high altitudes. He found out why the longitudes of country borders and coastlines sometimes differed by several hundred kilometres, depending on the source.

Riccardo Bellingacci, a Munich patent attorney and mathematician by training - and a passionate sailor in his spare time - remembers the great Lewis Fry Richardson in a comprehensive tribute. His almost unbelievable life story can now be readin YACHT, issue 6/2022, available as a digital edition in the YACHT app and can be ordered directly here. Or you can download the portrait directly via the link below.

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Pascal Schürmann

Pascal Schürmann

Editor YACHT

Pascal Schürmann joined YACHT in Hamburg in 2001. As head of copywriting and head of the editorial team, he makes sure that all articles make it into the magazine on time and that they are both informative and entertaining to read. He was born in the Bergisches Land region near Cologne. He learned how to handle the tiller and sheet as a teenager in a touring dinghy on the Sneeker Meer and on a tall ship on the IJsselmeer. During and after his studies, he sailed on the Baltic Sea and in the Mediterranean. As a trained business journalist, he is also responsible for boat financing and yacht insurance reports at YACHT, but also has a soft spot for blue water topics.

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