They can not form with a higher Tropospheric wind shear that results from the slightest expansion of the upper atmosphere post
heating of a few degrees.
Not exact matches
Heat your oven to about 325
degrees, put a
few capfuls
of this stuff in an oven - safe bowl and just throw it in the oven for an hour.
Heat 2 to 3 inches
of oil in a fryer or heavy pot to 375
degrees F. Fry the wings, a
few at a time, until golden brown on all sides and cooked through, about 10 to 15 minutes.
At this point, the pork should be fully cooked, but check the temperature deep inside and near the top
of the pork to make sure it's over 145
degrees F. Remove from
heat, and allow to stand for a
few minutes before slicing and serving.
The other day we went to a parade, and unintentionally ended up walking a
few miles from our car with our toddler in the 90
degree heat of July.
In an article published online March 10 in the journal Advanced Materials, Dr. Moon Kim and his colleagues describe a material that, when
heated to about 450
degrees Celsius, transforms from an atomically thin, two - dimensional sheet into an array
of one - dimensional nanowires, each just a
few atoms wide.
So, in theory, if you could manage to lower the temperature
of the surface
of the ocean ahead
of a hurricane by a
few degrees, you could conceivably pull enough
heat out
of the system that the storm would start to wind itself down.
To determine how tightly the probe binds, researchers
heat it up to shake the probe loose; however, often there's only a
few degrees difference between the «melting» temperature
of a probe bound to the exact target sequence and one where there is a minor discrepancy.
Apply a quick burst
of current to crush the can in a
few millionths
of a second,
heating the confined deuterium to millions
of degrees and compressing it to such an extreme that fusion occurs.
The corona is
heated to millions
of degrees, yet the lower atmospheric layers like the photosphere — the visible surface
of the Sun — are only
heated to a
few thousand
degrees.
Resume: Progress in the last
few decades in nano - scale thermal transport has enabled a significant
degree of control over
heat and sound propagation by lattice vibrations - phonons.
Progress in the last
few decades in nano - scale thermal transport has enabled a significant
degree of control over
heat and sound propagation by lattice vibrations - phonons.
What makes The Ferment Friend Heater with Thermostat so special is how we can just set the temperature, place the probe on the outside
of the vessel not in contact with the
heat mat, and it does all the work for us, keeping the brew within a
few degrees of optimum automatically.
You need just enough to cope with a
few degrees of difference, but not so much that you'll end up dying from
heat if the sun decides to shine that day.
I made the decision after a
few of my blogger friends told me how quick they were able to shoot outfits with a pro in our 100
degree heat.
It isn't easy to take photos in 40 -
degree heat (104 for you Fahrenheit users) so when the sun started to set yesterday, with the temperature a
few degrees lower, I jumped at the chance to show off my new Mayamiko two - piece which has been pushing me out
of my comfort zone...
Stratasys were the first to market with an FDM machine and patented a
heated chamber kept a
few degrees below the glass transition temperature
of the polymer.
For the first
few sessions we go at a brisk though hardly on - limit pace, but as the 40 -
degree heat sends some
of the press contingent in for refreshment we stick at it, gradually goading the Lamborghini instructors into quicker and quicker laps until, with a bit
of judicious sandbagging, we drop off the back
of the pace car, then get a clear run through the challenging second -, third - and fourth - gear left - right - left infield complex.
But then adding a substance that can endure thousand
degree temperatures to the surface
of metal or carbonfibre that also blocks 33 per cent
of that
heat from passing through it, even though it's only a
few microns thick, you didn't expect that to be easy now, did you?
«A
few examples
of true gameness in a dog would be the weight - pull dog that simply never quits trying to pull a load, and must be stopped by his handler when the load becomes too heavy, the tracking dog who continues to work out a faint, hours - old trail in the 100
degree F
heat and scores a perfect 100 in a grueling F.H. German tracking test, -LSB-...] the search and rescue dog who climbs over brush and debris hour after hour searching for victims.
Re # 232 «A minor quibble with the Krummy blog (# 217), he has neglected that he would have to
heat a column
of water roughly 4.3 km deep and several hundred km ^ 2 in area — so we're talking a
few degrees of heating at most.
You might expect to see
heat waves on the list — even though climate and weather are two different (but related) phenomena — but the report is a good reminder
of the tremendous scope
of problems a warming globe can cause; it's not just about an extra couple
degrees and wearing
fewer sweaters: «With warming temperatures, the breeding cycle
of malaria - carrying mosquitoes is shortening, which means more mosquitoes — and malaria — each year.»
I would think that 3
degrees would be more than enough, especially after a
few years
of that
heat radiating through any sediment that is between the water and the hydrate or permafrost.
In no way can these
few hundredths
of degrees be held responsible for ``... Record - breaking
heat combined with torrential rainfall and floods...»
Earlier last year, following an article reviewing 6 (also alarmist) books on the environment including Al Gore's An Inconvenient Truth, Nicholas Stern's report, and George Monbiot's
Heat, we discovered that, inconveniently, May had taken a
few liberties with the facts himself, citing a single study, referenced in the Stern Report to make the claim that» 15 — 40 per cent
of species «were vulnerable to extinction at just 2
degrees of warming, and that oil companies were responsible for a conspiracy to spread misinformation, and prevent action on climate change.
«Some or all
of these processes will be enough, Lovelock estimates, to tip the earth into a catastrophic hotter state, perhaps about eight
degrees centigrade warmer in temperate regions like ours, over the course
of a very
few decades, and that
heat will in turn make life as we know it nearly impossible in many places.
What you seem to fail to realize though is that a
few tenths
of a
degree of temperature spread out in the ocean equates to eventual huge temperatures in the atmosphere when that
heat is released.
Ice does not conduct
heat well, and a rise
of a
few degrees in the air would take thousands
of years to affect a glacier base a mile away, where it could lubricate the flow.
R Gates wrote: «What you seem to fail to realize though is that a
few tenths
of a
degree of temperature spread out in the ocean equates to eventual huge temperatures in the atmosphere when that
heat is released» ----------------------------------- By what possible mechanism can a release
of heat from the ocean warm the atmosphere to a higher temperature than that
of the ocean surface, as you seem to be implying?
This thread is a
heated discussion over
few hundredths
of a
degree «cherry pick» in data with a margin
of error
of 2 tenths
of a
degree or more.
If we continue on our current emissions path, we're already headed for warming
of up to 9
degrees Fahrenheit by 2100, which
few climate scientists argue would be anything other than catastrophic, because
of the drastic rise in sea levels,
heat waves, species extinctions and shifts in rainfall that would result.
However, even though surface temperatures
of land and ocean may experience feedback effects, there are
few possible feedbacks posited for the level
of the atmosphere where the net radiation to space takes place, and this means that the 1.2
degrees C
heating effect must be absorbed within the boundaries
of the atmosphere somewhere.
If the argument is that the
heat is going into the deep ocean, you may have hundreds
of thousands
of years as there is a lot
of water in which to disperse a
few hundredths
of degrees.
Because no cold or
heat from the outside can get through, the internal walls and surfaces
of a passive house — even the windows — are within a
few degrees of the air temperature
of the room.
According to the EIA, «
Heating degree days in 2016 were the second
fewest of any year since at least 1949, consistent with relatively warmer winter months.»
Issues such as the length
of day, location
of the site relative to the equator, building type, wind current, solar exposure, sun azimuth, total
heat degree days, total cooling
degree days and topography are just a
few of the factors needing to be considered.
A wide, 120 -
degree field
of view doesn't quite stretch as far as Netgear's latest Arlo Pro 2 (at 130 -
degrees), but 32 - feet night vision, two - way audio and Swann's True Detect PIR
heat - based motion sensing suggests the camera packs more than a
few tricks to support effective home monitoring.
Few people live within a mile
of the nearest store, and walking in 110
degree summer
heat isn't practical.
There are a zillion reasons why this works for us but a
few are: 1 - it allows us to actually be together - there is no hiding out in a room alone (so we do institute a «quiet hour» during the day so we all can find some solitude) 2 - it's absolutely counter culture to have bigger and better but we enjoy that we make the most out
of what we have and use our savings to have «experiences» rather than things 3 - it allows us to make updates and changes to the house bc we aren't spending a lot on
heating, cooling, furnishing etc. 4 - it staves materialism and consumerism to a
degree 5 - it's easier to work room by room like you are doing bc it isn't overwhelming time wise or financially.
Maybe you leave for work every morning at 9 a.m. and it will drop the
heat a
few degrees until about 4 p.m., when it kicks it up a
degree or two in anticipation
of your arrival back home.