Bigger storms produce faster winds, and consequently more G. bulloides.
Not exact matches
A few years ago Holzworth joined forces with colleagues in the UW Department of Atmospheric Sciences to use lightning to improve forecasts for convective
storms, the
big storms that
produce thunderstorms and tornadoes.
Scientists know that
storms with a rotating updraft on their southwestern sides — which are particularly common in the spring on the U.S. southern plains — are associated with the
biggest, most severe tornadoes and also
produce a lot of large hail.
But all that may change when three tennis films
storm the 42nd Toronto International Film Festival this year: Battle of the Sexes (featuring Emma Stone and Steve Carell), Borg / McEnroe (with Shia LaBeouf and Sverrir Gudnason), and Love Means Zero, a documentary about Bollettieri and his world - famous tennis academy, which has
produced the sport's
biggest stars — including Andre Agassi, Jim Courier, Monica Seles, Maria Sharapova, and Serena and Venus Williams.
In recent years, especially after the movie, An Inconvenient Truth, it has been popular to predict that upcoming hurricane seasons would
produce more and
bigger storms.