The built
in thermometer means it's perfect for baking or when making chocolate based products.
Not exact matches
Oh, I tried but, honestly, when you walk by your four year old's bedroom and see him with the dog's tail
in one hand and a greased up
thermometer in the other, the only suitable response is, «what the FUCK is going on
in here????» And when your four year old says to you, «the dog has a little fever but she still has to go to school today», which
means that — for one thing — you are never, ever, ever going to use that
thermometer again, any response other than, «are you fucking SHITTING me?»
In order to do so
means you need the best and most accurate
thermometer for your needs.
This
means that often we can leave the setting alone for days or weeks at a time with occasional check -
ins to the
thermometer strip, then adjusted slightly as needed.
Green Tree Frogs should be kept at a temperature between 68 and 77 degrees and
in many New England homes this
means a supplemental heat source and a
thermometer will be required to keep them warm and healthy.
Therefore, IMHO, it would be closer to the truth to call WUWT a «skeptic» site that calls into question exactly how much the
mean temperature has increased since the advent of the
thermometer record
in the late 1880's, how much of that is due to human activities and how much to natural cycles not under our control, what dangers rising temperatures may pose to human life and civilization, and what technologically and politically doable actions may be taken to reduce human - caused warming, and our dependence on foreign sources of fossil energy.
Any guesses as to what the
mean US temperatures would read
in two years time if over the next 6 months 90 % + of US
thermometers were correctly sited according to guidelines?
For Fig. 1
in top post at non-isothermal equilibrium,
meaning a
thermometer will indeed read T1b and > T1t again at equilibrium consider Verkley discussion
in b where the authors don't accept that the equilibrium state is isothermal by proving Fig. 1 has an isentropic temperature gradient:
Temperatures aloft can be measured
in a number of ways, two of which are useful for climate monitoring: by radiosondes (balloon - borne instrument packages, including
thermometers, released daily or twice daily at a network of observing stations throughout the world), and by satellite measurements of microwave radiation emitted by oxygen gas
in the lower to mid-troposphere, taken with an instrument known as the Microwave Sounding Unit (MSU).5 The balloon measurements are taken at the same Greenwich
mean times each day, whereas the times of day of the satellite measurements for a given location drift slowly with changes
in the satellite orbits.
If you
mean the surface
thermometers, none of them are
in the troposphere.
Measurement sites form the core input of the data set for calculating this «global
mean temperature» (whatever that actually
means), but the measurements from these sites is accurate at best to the nearest 1 degree,
in actual practice around the nearest 5 degrees since many are reading off mercury
thermometers — and this condition increases
in frequency the further back
in time you go.
Given this fact, why
in the world would an extra 2 degrees at either end of the
thermometer mean the end of the world?
Thermalized
means the GHG molecule collides with a non-GHG molecule
in the air, converting the photon to kinetic energy, which can now be seen on a
thermometer.
This is less than 1 percent as much mercury as found
in old
thermometers, but it still
means broken bulbs should be treated with care and discarded bulbs should be recycled instead of thrown out.
In exactly the same way as misreading 300C temperature with an alcohol
thermometer means that using a resistive
thermometer instead
means that the resistive
thermometer is wrong too.
The delayed sea level reaction to temperatures doesn't
mean tide records necessarily reflect actual
thermometer readings before 1990 but it's nevertheless interesting that, due to the low 1992 global temperature indicated
in the IPCC chart above (Mt Pinatubo?)