Sentences with phrase «much longer time»

It's quite possible even after many months, we may not be good enough to be earning what @Gary Parker and @Jerry Puckett are earning, as they've been doing this a much longer time, I presume.
«At the moment, if we have only got relatively small numbers trickling through, you know that you've got to hold quite a heavy load for a much longer time
And, It takes you a much longer time to recover than most people.
By clicking the up - down arrow icon on any profile section or individual job entry, you can lay your profile out in just the right order that will hold your target audience's attention for a much longer time.
This handset comes with a powerful 1500 mAh Li - Ion battery so you can stay connected for a much longer time.
As much as we would love to have Hugo stay with us in Beijing for a much longer time, we understand his personal challenges and wish him all the best in his future endeavors.
The handset can be completely submerged in water for a much longer time.
Using Destination folder, you can add more programs in the startup list and can remove them as well if any application is taking much longer time to load than expected.
She's been a film and TV star now for a much longer time than a lot of people...
Because so much data has to be backed up, a system image will take a much longer time to create than a smaller, more focused backup.
One reason I stick with iPad products is that they have a much smaller range of hardware profiles and thus will receive updates for a much longer time than comparable android flagship phones and tablets.
«I understand his effort to explain and to regain the trust, but I think that he himself must understand that it will take a much longer time,» she said.
Hence, always opt for a long term insurance plan to pay a lesser premium and get your family insured for a much longer time.
This in itself might persuade claimants to accept a settlement offer early in proceedings instead of waiting a much longer time in the hope of recovering more in tribunal.
The loan is amortized over a much longer time period such as 15 or 30 years (i.e., payments are set so that the entire loan would be paid off after 15 or 30 years of equal monthly payments) at a fixed or limited interest rate, and after 5 years, the loan automatically converts to a variable interest rate loan or limitations on the amount by which an already variable interest rate loan can vary are lifted.
The loan is amortized over a much longer time period such as 15 or 30 years (i.e., payments are set so that the entire loan would be paid off after 15 or 30 years of equal monthly payments), and after 5 years, there is a balloon payment due that must be paid off or refinanced, which if not paid would result in a default and foreclosure of the loan.
The first quarterly tax returns are due in December and this Budget gives them the tools that they need to strike — more resources on the ground, increased powers of investigation and a much longer time period within which to raise assessments.
For example Hong Kong's anti-money laundering laws have extended to (foreign) tax evasion as an «indictable offence» for a much longer time.
As the focus of your criticism, you have selected from a series of posts leading to one focused on a much longer time period starting in 1990 an example that I provided to show what verification looks like using IPCC AR4 predictions from 2000 (hence 8 years).
The higher figures are similar to anthropogenic C emissions, albeit over a much longer time span (> 20 ky).
Nonetheless, many people opposed to the ban have said that they aren't going to respect it and would rather pay the fine ($ 22), or have their employers pay the fine, than spend a much longer time commuting to their jobs or elsewhere.
Maldives and other very low profile islands will have their own 9/11 scale events to experience and report but that will happen on a much longer time frame than diminished stream flow due to melting glaciers (e.g., Himalayan glaciers) and minimal snowpack with early melt.
The Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets have much larger masses and consequently much longer time constants, but there is already observational evidence of nonlinear response.
And in terms of climate shifts, there may be something happening on much longer time scales (e.g. AMOC) that could influence the next climate regime shift.
Just as those of us who were long familiar with Lamb's temperature reconstruction smelt a rat when we saw the hockey stick, so climate knowledge from history and anecdote can help us all appreciate recent trends and climate events in the context of a much longer time frame than our short lives and shorter memories.
I have been looking for a much longer time period of history that correlate world events with climatic events eg LIA with famine, plague, witch burnings, crop failures, wars etc and MWPeriod with growth of wealth, cathedral building, improved living conditions, and / or wars, territorial expansion.
I don't see anything in the paper that discusses using it at such short durations, and the web site seems to anticipate much longer time frames.
I would agree that once you start looking at much longer time scales, the whole concept of an equilibrium climate looks increasingly dubious.
Rhyl says: May 1, 2011 at 5:56 am «I have been looking for a much longer time period of history that correlate world events with climatic events eg LIA with famine, plague, witch burnings, crop failures, wars etc and MWPeriod with growth of wealth, cathedral building, improved living conditions, and / or wars, territorial expansion.
-LSB-...] Climate is potentially predictable for much longer time scales than weather for several reasons.
Indeed, it can be argued that one of the problems with current climate science is that it contains too many meteorologists (who have access to thermometer records spanning a grand total of 150 years) and too few geologists (who view climate change through the prism of much longer time frames).
Their net removal rate from the atmosphere occurs on a much longer time scale.
This is simple, but extremely difficult, because the models must be run over a much longer time than can reasonably be done by the most powerful super computer, or so I have read.
The dating errors accumulate only over much longer time spans.
The sea level rise commitment due to thermal expansion has much longer time scales than the surface warming commitment, owing to the slow processes that mix heat into the deep ocean (Church et al., 2001).
Thus there are primarily internal system changes forcing climate responses, not primarily external such as the absolute value of solar power (except over much longer time scales).
They DO look over a much longer time; look at figure 2 of the paper.
Looking at a much longer time span, we see that the long term [natural] global warming trend is not accelerating.
Your fear is founded on TOO short a time frame, when Earth has shown far greater variability in the past, which require much longer time frames to assess.
The anthropogenic forcing on the climate is multifaceted, with both warming and cooling sides — cooling from aerosols over shorter time frames but warming from GH's over much longer time frames.
The Arctic Ice is like a slow moving weather system that works on much longer time scales.
Secondly, nuclear energy results in 9 — 25 times more carbon emissions than wind energy, due to the mining, refinement, and transportation of nuclear fuel; the much longer time involved in building a nuclear facility (approximately 4 times longer than WWS facilities); and larger building footprint.
At the same time, those increases in carbon dioxide occurred over a much longer time frame than we are dealing with currently.
To my question of whether Hansen posits a much longer time lag than 15 years in his pipeline postulation, you answer with a question:
And I don't think we get a 3 C increase over much longer time periods [centuries] in the future - unless human deliberately want this [such as will pay money for some effort that will get more warming - for whatever reason].
«It's amplified by feedback» but «it» is dependent on the average energy of the source, which has a much longer time constant and alternate method of acquiring energy.
I wrote in my first article, icecap that I know you have read: «Obviously much longer time trends could behave differently etc..
This means, that «fresh» water is coming up from the lower layers constantly, and before the whole ocean is adjusted to new CO2 levels, it takes much longer time.
Ocean heat capacity changes can take much longer time scales to settle out.
One quirky Antarctic question for me — on a much longer time scale — relates to the prolonged warming along the Antarctic Peninsula.
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