In those days, little was known about the care of sick children, but many thought that fresh air —
especially ocean air — was beneficial.
Not exact matches
This warm
air layer gets its heat reflected downwards during cloudy periods,
especially during long night extensive cloudy periods, as a result, Arctic
ocean ice doesn't thicken so much during darkness and leaves it up to summer sunlight (if there is some) to finish off what is left of it.
I hope I'm misinterpreting that statement because I like the 2d ones,
especially A Link Between Worlds, but the quote is «I think that, in the future, open
air games will be the standard for Zelda,» and a «Link Between Islands» sounds like it would contravene that statement (Unless they're using that as a codename for a BotW style game with the Windwaker style huge
ocean with lots of small islands concept)
This warm
air layer gets its heat reflected downwards during cloudy periods,
especially during long night extensive cloudy periods, as a result, Arctic
ocean ice doesn't thicken so much during darkness and leaves it up to summer sunlight (if there is some) to finish off what is left of it.
There is a difference between peaks and valleys in noisy processes (1998 surface
air temperature, 2007 record minimum ice, or shipping at a few small areas on the edges of the Arctic
ocean) and CO2 forcing driven trends,
especially when different measures.
Other than the fact that CO2 is necessary to human survival (we breathe it out after processing hydrocarbon food) and for 98 % of the energy that has allowed us to live longer and improve the standard of living over the last 300 years, just why exactly do we even care how much CO2 is in the
air,
especially if the temp of the
ocean which is dictated by the sun, will dictate the
air temp.
And
air temperatures over exposed land surfaces should warm differently than
air temperatures over sea ice,
especially when open
ocean separates them.
The AFZ is best developed along the Eurasian and Alaskan coasts,
especially in Eastern Siberia and north of Alaska's Brooks Range, where it appears that temperature gradients are sharpened by topographic trapping of cold Arctic
Ocean air.
October
air temperatures at the 925 hPa level (about 2,500 feet above sea level) were unusually high over most of the Arctic
Ocean (Figure 2c),
especially over the Beaufort and Chukchi Seas and over the East Greenland Sea (up to 8 degrees Celsius or 14 degrees Fahrenheit above the 1981 to 2010 average).
As regards a warming of the
ocean skin, evaporation is a continuous process caused by temperaure, density and pressure (not just temperature) differentials between water and
air so that the rate of evaporation accelerates when a water surface is warmed such as from the warming effect of extra greenhouse gases (
especially if the
air is dry).
Again I am not a physicist, but if the
air is hotter in day time,
especially at altitude, but not that much warmer at night times, then there will be a greater turnover of water above the
oceans.
The tropical
oceans take up vast amounts of energy through
air - sea heat fluxes,
especially in the equatorial regions dominated by wind - driven upwelling of cold water.
Kenneth wrote: «Why do you think the 93 % does not «control» the 1 %,
especially since the heat capacity of the
ocean is more than 1,000 times greater than the
air?»