Not exact matches
When the Bank of Canada cut interest
rates in 2015 to offset the collapse of oil prices, it was worried about more than a blow to gross domestic product; it was also thinking about what
mass firings in the oil patch could
mean for the financial system.
This
means we use whole numbers with two decimal places, with hopes this will ease the learning curve and help
mass adoption
rates in the general public.
First, the availability of outlets for selling older products to
mass consumers
means that firms can take more risk and introduce more new products at faster
rates at its regular stores.
Means with different superscript letters are significantly different, P < 0.05 [repeated - measures ANOVA with the Bonferroni correction applied to pairwise post hoc comparisons (weight, energy intake, and resting metabolic
rate) or paired - samples t tests (fat
mass and percentage body fat)-RSB-.
They might be the same degree of insulin resistance but one just has a higher basal metabolic
rate, or they have higher muscle
mass (
meaning that they burn more calories overall).
Plus, strength training, weight training, resistance training, whichever you prefer to call it, is going to help you burn off more fat, an increase in muscles
mass means an increase in your metabolic
rate.
Strength training, weight training, resistance training, whichever you prefer to call it, is also going to help you burn off more fat, an increase in muscle
mass means an increase in your metabolic
rate.
Strength training improves fat loss not only by improving your resting metabolic
rate (because slight increases in muscle
mass will burn more calories than if that muscle were fat) and through a mechanism called excess post-exercise oxygen consumption (EPOC), which basically
means that your body will continue to burn calories after your workout Though many distance runners may not be terribly concerned about fat loss specifically, they will nevertheless be heartened to know that any slight muscle
mass gains from weight training will be balanced by a loss of fat, and fat certainly does not make ANYBODY faster.
The more muscle
mass you have, the higher your resting metabolic
rate, which
means you'll burn calories at a higher
rate even when you're not working out.
Plus, he adds, after age 30, most adults begin to lose muscle
mass at a
rate of about 1 percent a year, which
means there's less firmness and more fat beneath skin.
So this is a brutally narrow take on how people gather, cohort, and manifest their vision of what it
means to be human, but the point remains: As educators, we suffer that same reductionism when we see the
masses in the same way that Nielsen does television
ratings.
If they can remove the censorship so it's minimal to none that it isn't even noticeable or vastly different to a manga reader and be truer to the material then they'll do well they'll have to, Mashima can't keep cutting corners just to get more
mass appeal on the anime even if it
means a higher TV
rating and / or later time slot.
Our modelled values are consistent with current
rates of Antarctic ice loss and sea - level rise, and imply that accelerated
mass loss from marine - based portions of Antarctic ice sheets may ensue when an increase in global
mean air temperature of only 1.4 - 2.0 deg.
The contribution from glaciers and ice caps (not including Greenland and Antarctica), on the other hand, is computed from a simple empirical formula linking global
mean temperature to
mass loss (equivalent to a
rate of sea level rise), based on observed data from 1963 to 2003.
But warming temperatures
mean that the glaciers are melting at a
rate that outpaces their ability to accumulate
mass during the rainy months.
J. T. Fasullo, R. S. Nerem & B. Hamlington Scientific Reports 6, Article number: 31245 (2016) doi: 10.1038 / srep31245 Download Citation Climate and Earth system modellingProjection and prediction Received: 13 April 2016 Accepted: 15 July 2016 Published online: 10 August 2016 Erratum: 10 November 2016 Updated online 10 November 2016 Abstract Global
mean sea level rise estimated from satellite altimetry provides a strong constraint on climate variability and change and is expected to accelerate as the
rates of both ocean warming and cryospheric
mass loss increase over time.
Abstract: «Global
mean sea level rise estimated from satellite altimetry provides a strong constraint on climate variability and change and is expected to accelerate as the
rates of both ocean warming and cryospheric
mass loss increase over time.
«It is very likely that the
rate of global
mean sea level rise during the 21st century will exceed the
rate observed during 1971 — 2010 for all Representative Concentration Pathway (RCP) scenarios due to increases in ocean warming and loss of
mass from glaciers and ice sheets.
Under those conditions, there will always be a lapse
rate in the atmosphere (in the troposphere) as long as it can find some
means to lose energy to interstellar space by radiation or loss of
mass.
The
mean air temperature (1906 - 2005) measured at the climate station Vent (1906 m a.s.l) was -1.6 °C and the
mean annual lapse
rate is 0.57 °C / 100 m. For additional information on the status of the glacier and on data relating to annual
mass balance and other measurements, visit the WGMS Fluctuations of Glaciers Browser.
This emission
rate is supported by four
mass balance calculations, which produce a
mean of 0.40 % and a 2σ confidence interval of 0.08 — 0.72 % of production.
Of course, this also
means they have the highest
rate of
mass shootings.