Sentences with phrase «in narrower band as»

Not exact matches

It's possible we could see the interest rate environment play out as it has in the past by rising sharply or staying in a narrow band for some time to come.
Up and down its narrow valleys and across its great plain went the pomp and panoply of the ancient world, and its more commonplace traffic as well: rich argosies from far Babylon, carrying the wares down to Egypt; royal messengers of the great kings who ruled in Persepolis, bearing decrees for the officer in charge at the frontier station of Assouan; plenipotentiaries of Hatti and of Egypt, seeking a modus vivendi in the political stresses of the thirteenth century; conquerors with their chariots and footmen and their tale of atrocities behind and yet before; wandering bands of foot - loose adventurers, seeking a good land where they might strike roots into the soil - all these and hosts of others were led among the Palestinian hills where went the great trunk roads of the ancient world, camped in the plains, bartered in the little cities, or stayed to lay permanent claim to some hit of the land.
Elsewhere there are people trying to grow pinot noir, sometimes called wine's canary in the coalmine as it tolerates a narrower band of temperatures.
Young was trying to point out that experience «on the ground» and developed skills are as valuable as assigning peoples worth and ability through (in Young's own words) «educations narrow band of values».
We are hopelessly stuck in the narrow band known as «visible light.»
As the sheet narrows in the middle, the middle is deformed by a band of parallel wrinkles running lengthwise.
The starburst galaxy NGC 1313, as imaged by the Gemini South 8 - meter telescope in Chile using narrow - band filters in the Gemini Multi-Object Spectrograph.
A narrow band of them in the high - energy spectrum would be a «smoking gun» for the presence of dark matter, says Michelson, but he thinks it's more likely that the dark matter emission would be mixed in with gamma rays from other energy sources in the universe and that scientists such as GLAST pioneer Elliott Bloom will have to work very hard to untangle the GLAST data to find it.
Tonight I tried your exercise and at first nothing happened, but when I turned my head back from my hands to my laptop to more closely follow your instructions, out of the corner of my eye, just for an instant I saw a pink color in a narrow band glowing around my palms It was barely a flash, but it looked just like the glowing colors I used to see as a child.
You want tension on the resistance band the whole time so never let your feet come in too narrow as you do these.
Second, most standardized tests in use today measure only a narrow band of low - level skills, such as recalling or restating facts, rather than such high - level skills as the ability to analyze information.
There's still wood, just not as much of it, in arcing narrow bands, not big planks.
Using the manual shifting does solve this as power is more than adequate when the engine is in its rather narrow power band (4000 - 6000rpm).
The Jaguar is comparatively down on power as well, with its supercharged 5.0 - liter V - 8 making «just» 550 hp and «a mere» 502 lb - ft of torque, the entirety of the latter available only in a narrow band between 3,500 and 4,000 rpm.
Celebrate the bands of gold on your fingers with the narrow band of sand known as Silver Strand State Beach, a one - side - ocean, one - side - bay area of sand at the south end of Coronado Island, in San Diego Bay.
The bands of paint appear as though they are stacked on top of each other, and narrow incrementally in width from bottom to top so as to form a ziggurat shape.
When he returns to painting in 1958, the single color used in the tall, narrow vertical band is the same deep ultramarine blue as the one in «Uriel.»
Warming must occur below the tropopause to increase the net LW flux out of the tropopause to balance the tropopause - level forcing; there is some feedback at that point as the stratosphere is «forced» by the fraction of that increase which it absorbs, and a fraction of that is transfered back to the tropopause level — for an optically thick stratosphere that could be significant, but I think it may be minor for the Earth as it is (while CO2 optical thickness of the stratosphere alone is large near the center of the band, most of the wavelengths in which the stratosphere is not transparent have a more moderate optical thickness on the order of 1 (mainly from stratospheric water vapor; stratospheric ozone makes a contribution over a narrow wavelength band, reaching somewhat larger optical thickness than stratospheric water vapor)(in the limit of an optically thin stratosphere at most wavelengths where the stratosphere is not transparent, changes in the net flux out of the stratosphere caused by stratospheric warming or cooling will tend to be evenly split between upward at TOA and downward at the tropopause; with greater optically thickness over a larger fraction of optically - significant wavelengths, the distribution of warming or cooling within the stratosphere will affect how such a change is distributed, and it would even be possible for stratospheric adjustment to have opposite effects on the downward flux at the tropopause and the upward flux at TOA).
I agree with the overall scenario (and was actually thinking of posting something similar), except that I suspect that instabilities and the Earth's rotation would cause the pattern to break up into relatively narrow latitudinal bands perhaps as little as a few tens of kilometres wide, with a sort of helical circulation in each (like a rope).
It is pretty clear that the model for the process governing Sun spot occurrence is the correct one, even if the parameterization is somewhat statistically uncertain (and even if some parameters may be randomly or deterministically varying slowly and / or narrowly in time, as well as the precise frequency distribution of noise energy, though we really only care about that within a narrow band around the resonances).
The low variability and uncertainty in the classical model is depicted as a narrow, almost horizontal, band in Fig. 5.
As you are a believer in metaphysics, it's not surprising that you find our motivation opaque, but for those of us who have adopted the usages of science, we do note that at pre-industrial levels, global temperature stayed within a narrow band.
As CO2 increases, it depletes the available radiation in the two narrow absorption bands exponentially.
The limited resolution of GRACE affects the uncertainty of total mass loss to a smaller degree; we illustrate the «real» sources of mass changes by including satellite altimetry elevation change results in a joint inversion with GRACE, showing that mass change occurs primarily associated with major outlet glaciers, as well as a narrow coastal band.
cheap measurement, only wide band IR cameras are needed up there and as many ground sources emitting low energy long period pseudo random sequences at specific narrow thermal IR frequency bands as the world can afford, with built in GPS tracking and some communication abilities.
This, too, is a function of the relatively rigid or narrow epistemology that law has; when signals can only be received in a narrow band of frequencies (to switch metaphors as well) an increase in the rate of signals leads ultimately to noise.
«If the Fed can maintain a low but positive rate of inflation, within a narrow band of about 1.5 percent of the Consumer Price Index, as it's been doing, inflation will be a non-issue in economic decisions in 2005,» says Doug Duncan, chief economist at the Mortgage Bankers Association.
It is mixed with a variety of stripes in different widths: a narrow horizontal for the pendant light, a medium stripe as loose covers on chairs, and wide bands of red fabric on the linen curtains.
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