Sentences with phrase «km resolution»

"km resolution" refers to the level of detail or precision in a given measurement, usually distance or space. It describes the ability to distinguish or represent objects in increments of kilometers, indicating the degree of clarity or sharpness in the measurement. Full definition
This diagram shows types, and size distribution in micrometres, of atmospheric particulate matter This animation shows aerosol optical thickness of emitted and transported key tropospheric aerosols from 17 August 2006 to 10 April 2007, from a 10 km resolution GEOS - 5 «nature run» using the GOCART model.
An orthographic projection of NASA's Blue Marble data set (1 km resolution global satellite composite).
Hansen, M. R., DeFries, R. S., Townshend, J. R. G. & Sohlberg, R. Global land cover classification at 1 km resolution using a decision tree classifier.
Finally, the west coast of Australia is warm, although not exceptionally so in the 250 km resolution GISTemp map.
Further down the line, Wehner says scientists will be running climate models with 1 km resolution.
Using the resulting 5 km x 5 km map showing the proportion of the year suitable for ZIKV transmission to humans, we then multiplied this by a map (also at a 5 km x 5 km resolution) of the number of births in the Americas for the year 2015, updated from (Tatem et al., 2014; UNFPA, 2014).
The researchers performed simulations at eddy resolving 4, 8, 16 and 32 km resolution.
Over the ocean this includes: sea surface slope and surface current, significant wave height, wind speed and sea level from radar altimetry at about 10 km resolution: sea surface temperature under cloud free conditions from the infrared radiometer at about 300 m resolution; chlorophyll a and phytoplankton from the imaging spectrometer under cloud free conditions at about 300 m resolution.
Initial downscaled daily simulations of temperature and precipitation at 10 - km resolution are produced using bias correction constructed analogs with quantile mapping (BCCAQ).
For several years, CERSAT has been providing daily Arctic sea ice maps at 12.5 km resolution.
The measurements used by GISS are gridded at either 1200 km or 250 km resolution, with appropriate weighting in grid cells containing both land and ocean.
The high - resolution simulations also reveal similarly localized features in precipitation (e.g., rain shadows) that are not resolved at the 45 km resolution.
Further, checking the 250 km resolution, meteorological station only map for the 44 - 45 period at Gistemp shows an off shore (island) meteological station of the coast of Namibia or Angola which again shows unusual warmth.
The MASIE - NH imagery are provided at a gridded nominal 1 km and 4 km resolutions.
Even at 125 km resolution, you are capturing only the biggest hurricanes, and at coarser resolutions, you aren't capturing them at all.
The issue with the 1 km grid is to account for topographic impacts on precip, plus the land surface model requires 1 km resolution.
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