Sentences with phrase «force over a short time»

Strength training using heavy resistance increases the ability of a muscle to generate force over a short time period.

Not exact matches

Some worry that over time, the MSC has become corrupted by the same forces that caused government regulation to fail: bowing to short - term commercial interests.
The short timing and low quality forces brands to be creative — and in this business, creative content always triumphs over slick production.
- and yet even after telling her that Aaron was successful doesn't seem interested in taking the final step to being diaper free - and they really need to financially speaking) Admittedly this was really hard (especially with a nursing infant on the side) but it is over in a short time and a side benefit was being forced to spend hours with my son which taught me alot about him besides potty training.
Generally get to know the person as well as you can before meeting (but don't wait too long because interest may wane over time); She explains that online dating isn't for everyone: «even a short break can be a great way for you to force yourself into connecting with people a different way, and even figure out if you want to continue down the online / app path at all.
Even if teachers are not sufficiently aware of the statistical forces at work to recognize their rather limited influence on test scores in the short run, they may well become aware of this over time.
Re # 30 and 33: You might also want to look at this RealClimate post showing what sort of variations one sees for temperature trends in climate models forced with steadily - increasing levels of CO2 over such short time periods: http://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2008/05/what-the-ipcc-models-really-say
The novelty is that this area unlike most others has at the moment an appearance of moving in unison over a short decadal time span with this mostly external forcing.
The anthropogenic forcing on the climate is multifaceted, with both warming and cooling sides — cooling from aerosols over shorter time frames but warming from GH's over much longer time frames.
Observed changes in short term precipitation intensity from previous research and the anticipated changes in flood frequency and magnitude expected due to enhanced greenhouse forcing are not generally evident at this time over large portions of the United States for several different measures of flood flows.
In fact it merely tells us in this case that using these methods we can not hope to give accurate predictions of trend over a short (say 10y) interval, because we know that natural variability is large relative to the forced response over this time period.
The data and the statistical analysis does not provide the evidence that the so called «pause», a time period with a lower trend estimate than the longer - term trend estimate, was more than just a short - term fluctuation around the median warming trend, mostly due to short - term unforced internal variability in the Earth system (and some contribution from decreasing solar activity and increased reflecting aerosols in the atmosphere, counteracting the increased greenhose gas forcing to some degree), like the «acceleration» over the 16 - year period from 1992 to 2007 (e.g., UAH trend: 0.296 + / - 0.213 (2 sigma) deg.
«The figure clarifies that internal climate variability over a short decadal or 15 - year time scale is at least as important as the forced climate changes arising from greenhouse gas emissions.»
Planetary gravity forces from the outer 4 planets over 100,000 years gradually change the shape of Earth's orbit from circular, to elliptical along with shorter term changes in the inclination angle and winter precession timing.
The climate is chaotic, nudged over the long - term by specific unique combinations for forcing, with a lot of wiggly natural variability «noise» over the shorter time frames.
As the quoted ~ 2,000 GtCH4 was the «potential» size of emissions and 1,000 years the shortest of a range of time - spans (let's call it 2,000 GtCH4 released smoothly over 5,000 years), with no «Shakhova event» happening the Arctic CH4 feedback would more likely equal present CH4 forcing and is thus equal in force to about 13 years - worth of today's CO2 emissions, or less for +5,000 years.
and it means that when we're looking at relatively short - term trends... the variance in that and the inability to really constrain those aerosol forcings really kind of make it hard for us to say what we should have expected over that time period.
This has been a very succesful paradigm, but has led to some old school geologist having a hard time accepting that a new force like humans can have any significant geological impact over short time.
Unable to predict what the world would look like in 10,000 years, but faced with the challenge of developing an object that would last that long, keep time accurately over the duration and be useful, the designers were forced to abandon short term thinking in favour of the long term.
Divorce and separation force families to face a great deal of change, typically over a relatively short period of time.
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