These are my goals for each month.
September: Download and familiarize myself with mathematica, the program I will be using to conduct my experiment. Also, visit Dartmouth and meet my mentor in person to discuss my project goals.
October: Gather information about El Niño. Learn more about air pressure, water temperature, and the effects El Niño has on the weather throughout the world.
November: Start gathering data. Collect data all the way back from the 1800s about ENSO each year.
December: Continue gathering data.
January: Put all the data into mathematica. Create functions and graphs which make the data easier to analyze.
February: Look for trends and try to figure out the data. This might take a while.
March: Still working on figuring out the data. Hopefully by March I found something within the data.
April: Work on my final presentation.
May: Finalize my final presentation.
September: Download and familiarize myself with mathematica, the program I will be using to conduct my experiment. Also, visit Dartmouth and meet my mentor in person to discuss my project goals.
October: Gather information about El Niño. Learn more about air pressure, water temperature, and the effects El Niño has on the weather throughout the world.
November: Start gathering data. Collect data all the way back from the 1800s about ENSO each year.
December: Continue gathering data.
January: Put all the data into mathematica. Create functions and graphs which make the data easier to analyze.
February: Look for trends and try to figure out the data. This might take a while.
March: Still working on figuring out the data. Hopefully by March I found something within the data.
April: Work on my final presentation.
May: Finalize my final presentation.