Sentences with phrase «many cooling phases»

El Nino and La Nina refer to the «warm and cool phases of a recurring climate pattern across the tropical Pacific,» according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
The housing market, meanwhile, «finally entered the early stages of a cooling phase in mid-2017 after the impact of changes to regulations and rising interest rates took root.
The cooling phase is a great time to clean up or work on other dishes if your soup will be part of a larger meal.
The broad area of cooler - than - average water off the coast of North America from Alaska (top center) to the equator is a classic feature of the cool phase of the PDO.
In April 2008, scientists at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory announced that while the La Niña was weakening, the Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO)-- a larger - scale, slower - cycling ocean pattern — had shifted to its cool phase.
The Pacific Ocean's current cool phase is driving the global warming slowdown — but that countering effect is not going to last, scientists say.
Since the end of last El Niño warming event of 1997 to 1998, the tropical Pacific Ocean has been in a relatively cool phase — strong enough to offset the warming created by greenhouse gas emissions.
When the AMO is in a cool phase, the Atlantic generally sees fewer hurricanes.
Now we're in the cool phase.
For nearly the past 20 years — probably since 1997 to 1998 — the PDO has been in a cool phase, and La Niña conditions have typically prevailed.
Recent research suggests that an AMO warm phase has been in effect since the mid-1990s, which has caused changes in rainfall in the southeastern US, and resulted in twice as many tropical storms becoming hurricanes than during cool phases.
The last couple of years have witnessed a cooling phase for Europe and parts of North America despite the recent overall increase in global temperatures.
What is evident from the dust during the cool phase and lack of dust during the warm phase was that the water vapour content of the air suddenly changed.
Cool phase Pacific Decadal Oscillation winters are generally wetter and colder.
Plant drought - tolerant species in years with strong El Niño forecasts, particularly during Pacific Decadal Oscillation warm phase; plant trees that require sufficient water during establishment in La Niña years and during Pacific Decadal Oscillation cool phases Focus planting more in spring as fall planting becomes more difficult with reduced soil moisture and test different planting timings as springs shift earlier
This NASA analysis highlights that the recent lull in surface temperatures is simply the result of natural variability superimposed upon the global warming trend - the cool phase of a cool / warm oscillation.
The most influential cycles are the El Niño Southern Oscillation and the Pacific Decadal Oscillation, which is a mighty cycle that typically takes 20 to 30 years to switch between its warm and cool phases.
It's a pattern of ocean temperatures in the Pacific that has a warm and cool phase.
The PDO has been in a cool phase for the past decade and some research has tied that to the global warming slowdown over that time.
In fact, the momentum scores for both cities seem to bear that trend out: Ottawa and Guelph are entering a cooling phase, and the average number of real estate sales compared to listings in both cities is starting to decline — a clear sign of a weakening housing market.
The Pacific Decadal Oscillation and the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation have «fluttered» into their cooling phase under the impetus of the cooler sun.
Could GCM projections substantially overestimate temperature trends for the western US if PDO shifts from its current warm phase to a cool phase?
If you do a search of the NYT archives for «crop failure» the majority and the largest seem to occur during the PDO's cool phase.
You seem to be happy about a leveling off trend even though we are essentially in a cool phase with low sunspot activity and La Nina occurrence.
It's right on schedule to have its cooling phase counteract GHG warming (and any warming due to solar activity which is now near its maximum but not showing in the record).
4) The AMO might be heading for a cool phase, and this combined with a continued cool PDO, on top of a weak Solar Cycle 24 could prove interesting.
In terms of the so - called «pause», it becomes more and more clear that the current cool phase of the PDO is largely responsible for this «pause», but looking at the continued rise in ocean heat content, and the nice job Cowtan & Way have done interpolated Arctic temperatures, we see that the «pause», may have reflected a slowdown in the rise of tropospheric temperatures, but the energy imbalance of the climate system continues quite strongly.
A new paper by Andrew Dessler of Texas A&M University bolsters the established view of clouds» role as a feedback mechanism — but not driver — in climate dynamics through a decade of observation and analysis of El Nino and La Nina events (periodic warm and cool phases of the Pacific Ocean).
He says we should be in a cooling phase recently.
What would be a surprise would be a flip back to the cool phase.
The cool phases keep hurricane seasons relatively calm.
If we were in the cooling phase then it will be moderated or reversed.
The average temperature above equilibrium during the 30 year warm phase will be +2 / π x 0.155 °C which with ECS = 1.5 °C results in BNO (S) requiring 120ZJ from storage to maintain the 1985 - 2014 warm phase and the accumulating storage of an identical amount during the cool phases 1925 - 84 and 2015 - 44.
I'd particularly like kim to comment, because whether or not we're in or will go into a cooling phase soon, the glaciers on Greenland and West Antarctica are looking like a National Velvet Liz Taylor now.
Do they really believe that there will be a decreasing trend in Atlantic SSTs as the AMO enters a «cool phase» sometime in the future?
Some highlights: Over part of the past year, the Pacific was in its cyclical cool phase, called La Niña; the Arctic remained far warmer than usual for recent decades.
This cooling is the result of natural long - term swings in ocean surface temperatures, particularly swings in the Interdecadal Pacific Oscillation or mega-El Niño - Southern Oscillation, which has lately been in a mega-La Niña or cool phase.
The Jet Propulsion Laboratory of NASA recently reported that the Pacific Ocean appears to be reverting to a cool phase, as well.
Some scientists, however, have been arguing the world is indeed headed for a cooling phase based on solar cycles.
The PDO was last in the cool phase back in the early 1970's.
And Now we have the beginning of a cool phase starting sometime in 2007 as the PDO reversed and other cycles seem about to follow suit.
Instead a very powerful cool phase of the pattern known as PDO is developing.
I also believe that it is possible that the earth cycle has entered a cooling phase since the late 1940's that has been slowed and turned into a warming phase by CO2 and the short - lived GHGs.
Notice how the variability was generally lower during the cooling phase from 1940 to 1980, and especially from 1950 to 1980.
After 1940 there is another AMO explicable cooling phase that is always explained away by a magical process involving the increase in light reflecting aerosols.
The other big 3, all show a distinct plateau commencing at, I would say; 1998, variously described as a cooling phase or lack of warming.
The cool phase of the PDO with a little kicker of a sleepy sun and increased aerosols has been a head - fake that movtivated «skeptics» have jumped on.
In winter, the effect of the cooler phase of the oscillation on the northern hemisphere is to depress temperatures slightly; but in summer, the cooler waters in the equatorial Pacific have less impact on the northern hemisphere's weather.
The cooling from 1950 to 1970 is due to the cooling phase of the ocean cycle as shown in the following paper (Figure 4): http://bit.ly/nfQr92
The system is now in a cooling phase, scientists have noted, which could last for years.
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