Sentences with phrase «much high altitude»

I haven't done much high altitude baking, so am not really sure what the best suggestion would be.
Scientific balloons have already flown at much higher altitudes, but they must follow the wind, Austin adds, whereas a pilot can steer and circle a glider.
The antineutrons escape the atmosphere and then decay into antiprotons at much higher altitudes.
This image suggests that the polar vortex clouds form at a much higher altitude, where sunlight can still reach, than the surrounding haze.
It was summer and they were at much higher altitudes but it would have been great.
In other words, because the payload is so heavy and geostationary orbit is at a much higher altitude.
The mountain biking, being at a much higher altitude, is usually very wet — you will start off cycling through thick clouds and mist and further down you'll probably encounter heavy rain, as well as having to cross a few streams on your bike.

Not exact matches

But I'm in a high altitude area and they didn't rise much....
I've never baked at high altitude, so I'm unsure of the effects on macarons — my initial thoughts were that you can't tweak the ingredients too much because then ratio would be off, but the meringue may take longer to beat up, the sugar will probably boil more quickly, and baking time or temperature may need adjusting.
If the batter is too thick or becomes too thick as it sits, add up to 1/4 cup of additional milk alternative (I live at high altitude, where things rise more, so I used the full 1 and 1/4 cups for the pancakes, but you may not need that much).
Love all your recipes, but sometimes it's hard for me to find all the ingredients over here in Mexico, I have a question for your Homemade vanilla pound cake, I've tried several pound cakes and when I place them in the oven they all colapse, we are at a very high altitude and can imagine that is the problem, might you have some idea that I could do so this doesn't happen, I would very much appreciate your help.
Because cookies bake for a shorter amount of time than bread or cakes, and are relatively low in water and high in fat content, they're much less susceptible to the vagaries of high - altitude baking.
The analysis also confirmed other effects of being at high altitudes, such as the increase in hemoglobin to ferry as much oxygen as possible.
Based on how intact a given ecosystem is as well as how much climate change it is expected to endure, they suggest that the high latitudes and high altitudes are likely to see the most change.
While Earth was much warmer millions of years ago, glaciers still existed in the high altitudes.
While there is still much to uncover, Denisovan genes can potentially be linked to a more subtle sense of smell in Papua New Guineans and high - altitude adaptions in Tibetans.
Even at their much colder temperatures, most of our solar system's gas giants also have warmer temperatures at higher altitudes.
The research team found the evidence confirming the stability of the East Antarctic ice sheet at an altitude of 6,200 feet, about 400 miles from the South Pole at the edge of what's called the polar plateau, a flat, high surface of the ice sheet covering much of East Antarctica.
If so, he says, this could lead to new, legal ways to boost red blood cell production in athletes, much like using oxygen tents or training at high altitudes.
The hot, humid exhaust from jet engines mixes with the atmosphere, which at high altitude is of much lower vapor pressure and temperature than the exhaust gas.
That helps them avoid serious problems caused by too much hemoglobin, but Tibetans with this so - called decreased hemoglobin phenotype must somehow use small amounts of oxygen efficiently to get enough of it to their limbs while exercising at high altitude.
High altitudes are desirable for these particles, as the higher parts of the atmosphere are quite self - contained and particles can survive for much longer before being rained out, unlike in the lower and more dense parts of the atmosphere.
At altitudes of 5000 m and higher, life is not easy here: the atmospheric pressure is much lower than at sea level, and oxygen is scarce.
Given that you know so much about blood gas mixes more than anyone with a degree in exercise physiology is likely to, have you applied that to exercising and oxygen tends high altitude velocity of training, lifting heavy things without any error, stuff like that?
That movie took a long time to get off the ground and before she ever appeared as Nova, Harrison served as a stand - in in the role of Dr. Zira (the part ultimately played by Kim Hunter) in the screen tests and extensive make - up tests through which the project evolved, even participating in a test for Edward G. Robinson in the role of Dr. Zaius (Robinson was forced to withdraw from the project because of a heart condition that prevented him from working under the heavy make - up and in the high altitude location where much of the film was to be made).
At this lofty altitude, there's not much higher you can go.
This one owner 2016 Jeep Compass High Altitude Edition has fog lights, roof rails, air - conditioning, cruise control, 60 / 40 - split folding rear seatbacks, full power accessories, heated mirrors, body - color trim, automatic headlights and remote keyless entry, plus much more.
Even a high - altitude comparison of the 2018 Kia Optima vs. 2018 Ford Fusion shows just how far much Kia has improved its midsize sedan for the current model year.
The higher altitude allows for much cooler weather, but more importantly provides some breathtaking scenery.
The Sacred Valley is at a higher altitude than the Andes of Ecuador, and as such, the mountains feel much more majestic.
Do you think it will be too much for him dealing with the high altitudes of Machu Picchu.
Of course there's a platforming element to any game that involves this much high - altitude movement, but the punk - rock attitude, bright colors, and frivolousness of Sunset Overdrive felt to me at odds with the difficulty in some of the boss fights.
But much aviation - associated carbon dioxide is emitted at high altitude, and this has been suggested to enhance the «greenhouse - activity» of CO2.
Vigorous convective mixing in the deep tropics also dilutes changes in near - surface CO2 much more than at higher latitudes, so low - altitude sampling contains relatively less information about carbon sources and sinks.
With the exception of glaciers that terminate in the ocean, and glaciers in the polar regions or at extreme high altitudes where the temperature is always below freezing, essentially just two things determine whether a glacier is advancing or retreating: how much snow falls in the winter, and how warm it is during the summer.
To reach areas that are 1.8 °F cooler, species in mountainous terrains need to shift 550 feet higher in altitude (which can be achieved in only a few miles), whereas species in flat terrain like the Midwest must move as much as 90 miles north to reach a similarly cooler habitat.45
Anderson and his colleagues start with a new and unexpected observation, based on high - altitude flights and satellite measurements: powerful updrafts from powerful summer thunderstorms can send moisture much higher into the stratosphere than anyone had thought.
Effectively, infrared radiation emitted to space originates from an altitude with a temperature of, on average, — 19 °C, in balance with the net incoming solar radiation, whereas the Earth's surface is kept at a much higher temperature of, on average, +14 °C.
Let me here mention a few of the cases where I've been wrong:... Just before Iraq torched the Kuwaiti oil wells in January 1991, I warned that so much smoke might get so high as to disrupt agriculture in much of South Asia; as events transpired, it was pitch black at noon and the temperatures dropped 4 - 6 °C over the Persian Gulf, but not much smoke reached stratospheric altitudes and Asia was spared.
And of course, CO2 variation is much less than that over the brief growing season of the high - altitude / high - latitude trees in question...
Nighttime winds in temperate and tropical latitudes tend to «decouple» at night, meaning that near - surface winds lose much of their connection with higher - altitude winds.
CO2 doesn't give» greenhouse effect» — normal / honest greenhouse has SOLID plastic or glass roof — on the other hand CO2 is only 270 - 500ppm = CO2 would be as fishnet as roof, or a postage stamp as roof # 2: normal / honest greenhouse has solidly attached roof, on the other hand, when CO2 warms up - > instantly goes high up to higher altitude, where is colder and cooling much more efficient / after all CO2 is 2/3 made from oxygen = lying that CO2 is a greenhouse gas is destructive for the society and environment.
The higher altitudes of the atmosphere then need to be, and are actually, much more constant in temperature and don't drop in temperature at all overnight.
The poleward shift of high - altitude clouds affects how much sunlight reaches Earth's surface because when they move, they reveal what's below.
But if you look at some South American or east African countries, you have plateaus and a lot of areas at higher altitudes, so they will lose much less.»
When ascending the dry air cools much faster and low altitudes, at high altitudes the difference is small.
Water Vapor in the atmosphere is much lighter and rises to significantly higher altitudes in much greater percentages.
Did you ever see much forest growth at higher altitudes and latitudes where is is very cold?
If you have that, how much if much higher in altitude (like ~ 100 grams in the cubic meter as it would be near the 65 - mbar level at 217 K, little humidity).
You interpret the very depressed curve as looking down from Space at a high - MOA altitude which, due to the lapse rate, is much cooler than the surface.
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