00:00Is it true that we can predict bad weather from coffee beans?
00:07Let's find out from Michael Peronce of IBC 13.
00:15Is it true that we can predict bad weather from coffee beans?
00:21Let's find out together with science behind this.
00:24That's right, there's a rainy season.
00:27This post was a trending topic online when a typhoon hit,
00:31where the bubbles in the middle of a cup of coffee
00:34caused the typhoon to pass by.
00:36It's a clear indication of the time when the bubbles are around the coffee beans.
00:41Many netizens immediately believed it.
00:44But the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration
00:49or PAGASA says differently about the country's own weather agency.
00:56In the first place, the elements of a bubble,
01:00where it contains carbon dioxide,
01:02and the moisture around our atmosphere,
01:05the so-called water vapor,
01:07will occur in the water.
01:09But what is the best way to predict bad weather?
01:13One of them, and the most familiar to us,
01:15is the barometer or the instrument that measures atmospheric pressure.
01:19We have two different types of barometers.
01:21We have the mercurial barometer and the aneroid barometer.
01:24It is also important for the public to know the factors
01:27behind the formation of a low-pressure area or LPA in our ocean.
01:31First of all, the atmosphere.
01:34Second, the hot temperature in the ocean,
01:36which can only be experienced in the Pacific Ocean and the West Philippine Sea.
01:41The most important reminder of all
01:43is to always keep an eye on the weather updates of PAGASA,
01:46which they release more often
01:48to find out the truth and the latest weather.
01:52Now that the effects of climate change are no longer a joke,
01:55it is easier to trust experts.
01:58Remember, it's just a matter of time for changes,
02:01not your source.
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