Sentences with phrase «get uncertainty ranges»

Not exact matches

But given the uncertainty of the time range and the emotional aspects of carrying a nonviable pregnancy, many moms opt for a D&C or medically induced miscarriage once the diagnosis has been confirmed, preferring to get the physical aspect of the miscarriage over with as quickly as possible.
For example, we know the past CO2 radiative forcing to very high accuracy, but there are more uncertainties in the aerosol forcing; applying a consistent climate sensitivity to both CO2 and aerosols, you can get a match to the observed record for a range of different supposed aerosol forcings, but you can't take it too far.
Adding various kinds of restrictions and extra conditions to the loan reduces the lender's uncertainty about when they'll be receiving money, and also gives them a greater range of legal recourse to get it sooner (since they can pursue the borrower right away if they violate any of the conditions, rather than having the wait until they die without having paid their debt).
I began seeing uncertainty, I began understanding the range of motives, getting a glimpse of how complicated this whole situation was.
Even more ideally though you'd show the range of uncertainties that exist in the literature so that I, and everyone else, gets some idea of what the field in totality thinks of uncertainty in those temperatures.
But at most, you will get an «answer» with range of possible values and an assessment of the uncertainty.
If you set goals in terms of global average temperature, then you need to feed that through the uncertainty of climate sensitivity to get the concentration of greenhouse gases — not just carbon dioxide, but the whole range of greenhouse gases.
Lucia uses an AR - based approach, and gets similar ranges of uncertainty.
26 Add Ice - Albedo Feedback to Water Vapor Feedback (NRC, 1979 still good) Add these changes to the basic relative humidity feedback and get as the uncertainty range for the long - term response to CO 2 doubling.
Don't know where I got my lines crossed but I herewith point out in Chapter1 figures 1.4 and 1.5, comparing near surface temperature range observed data with projections, 1990 — 2015 with its plateau of measured data warming and large uncertainty shading.
Apart from this, the way to get around the whiplash problem is to get rid of the mindset and decision analytic framework whereby policies are based on a most likely outcome (with an uncertainty range), determined from a negotiated consensus about a highly uncertain topic.
Add the facts in trend: The oceans are acidifying, The climate has already shifted 4 degrees of latitude in the past 30 years; the Arctic will likely be virtually ice free during the summer melt within the decade, all the uncertainty ranges are positive and none of them are negative, CO2 is plant food, but what does that mean when the oxygen levels are dropping, the Hoover dam is supposed to shut down in 2023 due to no water (latitudinal shift), the Yangtze in China is getting very low, etc. etc..
When I've heard «doesn't represent the full range...» I've always interpreted it as something along the lines of «the ensemble of opportunity is not the ensemble you'd get if you explicitly asked researchers to characterize their (subjective) uncertainty
The notion that there is a true range of uncertainty seems intuitive -LRB-»... when I finally got in touch with my feelings I found out I can't trust them...») I could imagine you mean any of: The uncertainty we are interested in is not the uncertainty in the system being considered?
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