Not exact matches
He did, but even if you don't
know what that means, and simply put he found that a planet's orbital
period and distance are related, very soon you can gaze through the new observatory here at the same stars and planets that Kepler
observed 400 years ago.
«The court
observes first of all that the data to be retained make it possible, in particular, (1) to
know the identity of the person with whom a subscriber or registered user has communicated and by what means, (2) to identify the time of the communication as well as the place from which that communication took place and (3) to
know the frequency of the communications of the subscriber or registered user with certain persons during a given
period.
«We don't
know if the
observed reversibility of the disease symptoms as
observed in the mouse,» he says, «exists in humans who have a much longer
period of pre - and post-natal brain development than mice — months and years in humans, weeks in mice.»
From 1645 to 1715, a
period known as the Maunder Minimum, there were virtually no sunspots
observed, indicating a «quiet»
period in the sun's activity.
When your
period goes missing, you
know that something is amiss, but there are also many other, less obvious indicators we can
observe that will give us useful information about our overall health.
They must have
known the applicant for a
period of at least three years and have
observed his / her willingness to follow all criteria for membership and to subscribe to the purpose of this Club.
The advantage to treating a cat with an adulticide is being able to
observe it during the 2 - week
period after treatment while the worms are dying, compared to not
knowing when the heartworms will die naturally in an untreated cat.2
However, for the recent
period 1993 to 2003, the small discrepancy between
observed sea level rise and the sum of
known contributions might be due to unquantified human - induced processes (e.g., groundwater extraction, impoundment in reservoirs, wetland drainage and deforestation).
Spurred by advances in computing, telecommunications, and marine architecture, researchers
no longer want to just
observe the ocean for short
periods in small places.
Furthermore, the missing hotspot in the atmospheric warming pattern
observed during the last warming
period proves that (1) the IPCC climate theory is fundamentally broken, and (2) to the extent that their theory correctly predicts the warming signature of increased carbon dioxide, we
know that carbon dioxide definitely did not cause the recent warming (see here for my full explanation of the missing hotspot).
Solar forcing is the only
known natural forcing acting to warm the climate over this
period but it has increased much less than greenhouse gas forcing, and the
observed pattern of long term tropospheric warming and stratospheric cooling is not consistent with the expected response to solar irradiance variations.
The amount of warming 1983 - 2009 is not
known, but my calculations were a valid comparison (apples with apples) which showed that the contribution from
observed cloud changes over the
period was nearly 10 times greater than the contribution from CO2.
``... the occurrence of grand minima depicts a weak (marginally significant) quasi-periodicity of 2000 — 2400 years, which is a well -
known period in 14C data... no clear periodicities are
observed in the occurrence of grand maxima.»
We don't
know much about tipping points, but, as Howarth
observes, «'' the world runs a high risk of catastrophic climate change in the
period of 15 to 35 years from now.
However that narrative is based on what we have actually
observed over a
period of 1000 years with the gaps filled in by deduction informed by
known laws of physics.
You wrote, «However that narrative is based on what we have actually
observed over a
period of 1000 years with the gaps filled in by deduction informed by
known laws of physics.»
Another stable
period can be
observed on the [CO2] chart between 130 000 and 120 000 AC, I would be very interested in
knowing what it is caused by, if you have any idea...