Sentences with phrase «circulation regimes»

The phrase "circulation regimes" refers to different patterns or ways in which fluids or air move and flow within a system. It can be used to describe the various ways in which circulation occurs within a specific environment or area. Full definition
If the ocean is a bit warmer, the new circulation regime starts earlier in the morning, and cuts down the total daily warming.
As a result, the phenomena I describe above, with the rapid changes in circulation regimes, are not represented in the climate models at all except as gridcell sized averages...
In a recent paper titled, «Demarcating circulation regimes of synchronously rotating terrestrial planets within the habitable zone,» my co-authors and I analyze a set of climate model calculations to examine the dependence upon stellar effective temperature of the atmospheric dynamics of planets as they move closer to the inner edge of the habitable zone.
Several ideas have been put forward to explain this hiatus, including what the IPCC refers to as «unpredictable climate variability» that is associated with large - scale circulation regimes in the atmosphere and ocean.
Willis writes: «Under the new late - morning cumulus circulation regime, much less surface warming goes on.
I am particularly interested in atmospheric circulation changes which may have resulted from recent landcover changes and interactions with other natural circulation regimes such as those due to El Nino / Southern Oscillation or monsoons.
Physical properties of the water and satellite estimates of primary productivity were used separately to describe 25 different water masses in Australia's oceans, identified by different circulation regimes and oceanographic features.
We will present the recent observational data and modelling studies pertaining to the variety of planetary atmospheres circulation regimes, including giant and terrestrial planets.
Topics covered: Cloud and haze formation and evolution in Earth Atmosphere — Radiative Transfer and Polarization in Atmosphere Characterization — Atmospheric Circulation Regimes for Solar System and Exoplanets — Clouds and Hazes in the Early Earth — Clouds and Planetary Habitability — Clouds and Hazes in Jupiter, Saturn, Titan — Clouds and Hazes in Strongly Irradiated Exoplanets — Clouds and Hazes in Weakly Irradiated - Exoplanets and Brown Dwarfs
Although it has long been recognised that large - scale circulation regimes affect seasonal, inter-annual climate, and decadal variations, the expectations have been that anthropogenic climate changes will dominate on time scales longer than 50 years.
Linkages between Arctic summer circulation regimes and regional sea ice anomalies.
By the mid 1960s, Bryson concluded that «climatic changes do not come about by slow, gradual change, but rather by apparently discrete «jumps» from one [atmospheric] circulation regime to another.»
There are a series of temperature thresholds in the tropics, each of which when crossed initiates a completely new circulation regime.
The global oceanic conveyer belt (shown above in a simplified illustration), is a unifying concept that connects the ocean's surface and thermohaline (deep mass) circulation regimes, transporting heat and salt on a planetary scale.
Ruddiman and McIntyre (1981); Boyle and Keigwin (1982)(using Cd as tracer for nutrients); for further refs., see Broecker et al. (1985); later Boyle and Keigwin, using a core from a spot where deposits had built up exceptionally fast, found that «the deep ocean can undergo dramatic changes in its circulation regime» within 500 years, Boyle and Keigwin (1987), p. 36.
The global oceanic conveyer belt, is a unifying concept that connects the ocean's surface and thermohaline (deep mass) circulation regimes, transporting heat and salt on a planetary scale.
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