Sentences with phrase «effects like ocean»

Not exact matches

To find a beer that has the same tastes - like - the - ocean - effect is possible, Jeppe Jarnit - Bjergsø, the founder of Evil Twin Brewing told me, but most restaurants don't put as much research and expertise into building a 50 - page beer list.
This soother includes 3 different sound settings — an ocean setting that features harbour like sound effects, as well as two different «white noise» sounds and a variety of songs to help your baby get off to sleep.
«I would say the stratosphere is still needed to amplify these effects from the troposphere to have an impact on the ocean, but I would like future research to really investigate this question.»
«We've shown that under clean and humid conditions, like those that exist over the ocean and some land in the tropics, tiny aerosols have a big impact on weather and climate and can intensify storms a great deal,» said Fan, an expert on the effects of pollution on storms and weather.
«Considering the Southern Ocean absorbs something like 60 % of heat and anthropogenic CO2 that enters the ocean, this wind has a noticeable effect on global warming,» said lead author Dr Andy Hogg from the Australian National University Hub of the ARC Centre of Excellence for Climate System SciOcean absorbs something like 60 % of heat and anthropogenic CO2 that enters the ocean, this wind has a noticeable effect on global warming,» said lead author Dr Andy Hogg from the Australian National University Hub of the ARC Centre of Excellence for Climate System Sciocean, this wind has a noticeable effect on global warming,» said lead author Dr Andy Hogg from the Australian National University Hub of the ARC Centre of Excellence for Climate System Science.
For example, he has said in recent years that vast carbon dioxide emissions might ultimately cause a runaway greenhouse effect like on Venus that would boil the oceans and make Earth uninhabitable, the Times reported.
The finding suggests that the young Venus might have been much like Earth, with oceans surrounding its extensive landmasses, before a runaway greenhouse effect condemned it to its bleak fate.
El Niño — a warming of tropical Pacific Ocean waters that changes weather patterns across the globe — causes forests to dry out as rainfall patterns shift, and the occasional unusually strong «super» El Niños, like the current one, have a bigger effect on CO2 levels in the atmosphere.
Not only in urban areas either, but as steamships and trains began crossing the oceans the effect must have been like or even worse than contrails from jets.
C. Carreau, ASPERA - 4 & MAG teams, Venus Express, ESA Annotated image illustrating loss of hydrogen through plasma wake Venus may have lost oceans of water due to a runaway greenhouse effect which evaporated water into the upper atmosphere, where ultraviolet light dissociated water into ionized atomic hydrogen and oxygen (some later incorporated into carbon dioxide) that were blown away by the Solar wind due to the lack of a strong magnetic field like the Earth's (more).
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The opening effects shot composite of the complex in the middle of the ocean was slipping so made it looked like my grandma match moved it by hand.
A smoothing exfoliation mimics the rejuvenating effects of sand on bare feet, while a mineral - rich mask — much like the Pacific Ocean waters just outside — restores moisture to thirsty skin.
If it was remade today, I would definitely say add extra customization options, some kind of point system like Mass Effect, or the extremely engaging power up road in Star Ocean 2.
This «imagined ocean at low tide as their setting» features a series of 3D renderings, and photos the New York - based artist's sculptures, paint, and found images, to depict yoga poses in plastic and Mermaids surrounded by the detritus of «Snapchat - like» filters and special effects.
Much like El Niño in the Pacific Ocean, the Indian Ocean Dipole has far - reaching consequences, and these effects are likely to strengthen under climate change.
While on the topic of the oceans» response to warming, I would very much like to see a RealClimate posting on the effects on sea levels of GW.
Yesterday on PBS (no doubt a rerun like always) there was a presentation on the increasing proportion of discarded waste in the world's oceans and it's effect on marine life.
We continue to see study after study showing the negative effects of too much carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, in the oceans, and yet some would like to believe that's a good thing.
So feedbacks like reduced ocean capacity, changes due to landuse etc. might effect our ability to predict future CO2 levels for a given anthropogenic input, but they are irrelevant to the sensitivity of T to actual CO2 concentration.
We work with global ocean circulation models to understand issues like the thermal expansion of ocean waters due to global warming or the effect of changing ocean currents on regional sea levels.
AGWSF's Greenhouse Effect doesn't have convection because it doesn't have real gases, it has substituted the imaginary ideal gas without properties and processes, but our real Earth's atmosphere does have convection — the heavy ocean of real fluid gas oxygen and nitrogen weighing a ton on our shoulders, a stone per square inch, acts like a blanket around the Earth stopping the heat escaping, compare with the Moon which has extreme swings of temperature.
Climate models are like weather models for the atmosphere and land, except they have to additionally predict the ocean currents, sea - ice changes, include seasonal vegetation effects, possibly even predict vegetation changes, include aerosols and possibly atmospheric chemistry, so they are not like weather models after all, except for the atmospheric dynamics, land surface, and cloud / precipitation component.
That long - term global ocean heat buildup has to be caused by an external forcing like the increased greenhouse effect.
There is a document «seesaw» effect due to lags in ocean mixing that produces the irregular «pulses» like the RWP and MWP plus the Younger Dryas and LIA.
The cumulative effect of environmental threats like climate change, ocean acidification and overfishing, brings the world's interconnected ocean close to a phase of extinction of marine species that is «globally significant» and unprecedented in human history, an international panel of marine scientists states.
And while indicators like ocean heat content may respond more quickly or dramatically to the carbon emissions that cause climate change, surface temperature is more closely related to the effects of climate change — and the effects, after all, are what climate policies at any level are intended to ease.
While it is said by NOAA sea levels rise by 1.7 - 1.8 mm per year, for coastal stations that is wrong, because NOAA adds 0.3 mm to allow for ocean floor lowering due to post glacial rebound, while this might be correct, for coastal stations the effect is more like 1.5 mm per year.
She suggests that future shelf stability studies should consider the role of the ocean's influence, like the effects of warm water pulses flowing under the Cosgrove Ice Shelf.
On the face of it, for the layman, temperature rises causing CO2 to come out of the ocean, with no feedback effect, seems like a perfectly reasonable explanation.
«Drilling in high - risk places like the freezing waters of the Arctic Ocean is a backwards - looking strategy when we need to look forward to meet energy needs and limit the effects of climate change.»
However, the ecological impact we do have some basis for understanding is the effect of ocean acidification on important biological processes like calcification.
Actually Fielding's use of that graph is quite informative of how denialist arguments are framed — the selected bit of a selected graph (and don't mention the fastest warming region on the planet being left out of that data set), or the complete passing over of short term variability vs longer term trends, or the other measures and indicators of climate change from ocean heat content and sea levels to changes in ice sheets and minimum sea ice levels, or the passing over of issues like lag time between emissions and effects on temperatures... etc..
For me, that means I'd like to see it broken down, which Coby has done well so far, by (these are just examples i'd like to see): Factors and evidence supporting or effectively debunking a) ocean acidity, which in itself has produced a number of alarming effects including less saline density in turn causing a slowing of thermohaline circulation (such as the gulf stream) b) photosynthesis - carbon sinks vs. sources or any direction that you'd like to take using what science knows CO2 to have an effect on.
You don't think perhaps that celestial cycles just might have an effect on magma currents (yes just like the ocean, just slower) and that effect translates to changes in sea - floor seismic activity from time to time?
The AGW claim from the comic cartoon KT97 and kin The Greenhouse Effect says that Shortwave, (near UV, visible and near infrared, but mostly visible) heats up land and oceans, that no longwave infrared from the Sun gets through the invisible undefined and unexplained barrier said to be like the glass of a greenhouse, and then the Shortwave heated land and oceans radiate out longwave infrared, (which in real physics is heat, also called thermal infrared).
«This is a consequence of variations in heat exchange between the atmosphere and the oceans, and other decade - to - decade changes like variations in solar forcing and the solar dimming effects of pollution and volcanic eruptions,» BoM says.
Where clouds are absent, darker surfaces like the ocean or vegetated land absorb heat, but where clouds occur their white tops reflect incoming sunlight away, which can cause a cooling effect on Earth's surface.
One aspect of Roy Spencer's work is that internal random oscillations of things like surface ocean temperature spatial patterns (affected by winds) which can affect clouds could have a forcing effect that could easily be mistaken for climate sensitivity to external forcing.
They also include models for things like: entry into and exit from Ice Ages, the effect of the Earth's orbit on climate, the earth's climate history on scales of thousands to millions of years, ocean - atmosphere couplings (e.g. heat transfer, CO2 sinks), decadal phenomena such as ENSO and the PDO.
In some locations, like Indonesia, the change in ocean temperatures and atmospheric patterns brought about by El Niño has the opposite effect — shifting thunderstorms eastward and causing extremely dry conditions.
The world's oceans are like brakes slowing down the full effects of greenhouse gas warming of the atmosphere.
Partly this is because it's hard to beat the blunt biodiversity effects of direct habitat destruction (like deforestation) and partly that is because climate warming is often a slow process, for instance in the deep oceans, where its ecological effects are «outpaced» by the rapidly escalating plastic pollution — admittedly an impossible comparison.
Other effects like temperature - dependent CO2 solubility in ocean water, carbon stored in the land biosphere, weathering rates, and ocean nutrient inventories may help explain the rest of glacial − interglacial changes in atmospheric pCO2 (26, 27).
For example if the ocean has warmed like in 1998, it would be able to absorb less of Man's added CO2, so in those years the effect of Man's contribution is higher.
Wind turbines can be built on both land and — increasingly and to great effect — offshore in large bodies of water like oceans and lakes.
13 C. Wind & Ocean Currents Wind & water combine w / the effects of the sun to influence weather & climate Wind Patterns Winds blow in fairly consistent patterns — prevailing winds — map on pg.60 Coriolis Effect — causes winds to blow diagonally The Horse Latitudes Why are they called this??? Doldrums — windless areas near the Equator Ocean Currents Just like the wind, cold and warm streams of water (currents), move through the oceans El Nino Periodic change in the pattern of ocean currents & water temperOcean Currents Wind & water combine w / the effects of the sun to influence weather & climate Wind Patterns Winds blow in fairly consistent patterns — prevailing winds — map on pg.60 Coriolis Effect — causes winds to blow diagonally The Horse Latitudes Why are they called this??? Doldrums — windless areas near the Equator Ocean Currents Just like the wind, cold and warm streams of water (currents), move through the oceans El Nino Periodic change in the pattern of ocean currents & water temperOcean Currents Just like the wind, cold and warm streams of water (currents), move through the oceans El Nino Periodic change in the pattern of ocean currents & water temperocean currents & water temperature
The above also is true for the opposite effect: if there were no other fast releases (like lots of volcanoes spewing lots of CO2 in short time), the ocean temperature will give more or less CO2, until a new dynamic equilibrium between ocean releases (mainly near the tropics) and sinks (mainly near the poles) and the biosphere releases and sinks is reached.
I am assuming Scafetta has not analyzed the forces from Jupiter and Saturn to see what effect they might have on Earth low frequency (climate) ocean up / downwelling cycles or anything like that.
The kind that believes utter nonsense like that the sun is made out of iron, volcanoes emit more C02 than humans, there is no greenhouse effect, that the ocean is cooling, sea - level isn't rising, and that legitimate papers that contradict their wild claims actually support them?
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