Sentences with phrase «ocean air giving»

Not exact matches

If you live by the ocean and cope with salty air damaging your patio, give this one a try.
Given the obvious concerns for human ecological health — in terms of climate change, heavy metal toxification, indoor air quality, air pollution, plastics in the oceans, and things like that — there will be a large - scale trend to buildings that start to act like organisms.
Understanding how carbon flows between land, air and water is key to predicting how much greenhouse gas emissions the earth, atmosphere and ocean can tolerate over a given time period to keep global warming and climate change at thresholds considered tolerable.
Not surprisingly, given that the surface ocean is responsible for much of atmospheric warming, ocean warming and global surface air temperatures vary largely in phase with one another.
Over the period 1984 — 2006 the global changes are 0.28 °C in SST and − 9.1 W m − 2 in Q, giving an effective air — sea coupling coefficient of − 32 W m − 2 °C − 1... [D] iminished ocean cooling due to vertical ocean processes played an important role in sustaining the observed positive trend in global SST from 1984 through 2006, despite the decrease in global surface heat flux.
Be the favorite houseguest: Give a soap that conjures fresh ocean air.
(In comparison to his «Ocean's Eleven» cohorts George Clooney and Brad Pitt, he legitimately gives off the air of a regular guy.)
His rigorous conditioning and perseverance as a track star, as well as his childhood of being bullied and ridiculed by his peers for being Italian, gave him the fortitude to go the distance during his days in World War II as an Air Force bombardier whose plane is shot down, forcing him and fellow soldiers to have to survive in a life raft in the middle of the Pacific Ocean for weeks.
Vaulted ceilings, polished mahogany and open - air pavilions give this five - bedroom estate in Casa de Campo a relaxed yet stylish vibe and the ocean views make it more than worth the trip to the Dominican Republic.
However, it is actually really hard to keep track exactly of your earnings as the system is quite unbelievably complicated for Air France in particular: there are different earning tables for intercontinental, Caribbean and Indian Ocean, European, and domestic flights — and three different levels of earning for a given booking class in Europe depending on the fare type (that's overall 67 different possibilities for Air France alone).
BEDROOMS MASTER SUITE: - Housed in its own pavilion separated from the living and dining area - King - sized bedroom with vaulted ceiling, dark teak floors, glass doors leading out onto a private deck with garden and ocean views - TV lounge with comfortable sofas, large flat - screen TV with DVD player - Small reading room which «floats» above the fish pond with glimpses of the pool - Huge dressing room - Semi-open ensuite bathroom with large rectangular terrazzo bathtub, his - and - hers vanities, and walk - in rain shower - Private garden - Air - conditioned GUEST BEDROOMS 1 & 2: - Both guestrooms are housed in a separate pavilion adjacent to the dining area — designed for children but flexibly accommodate adults - One room has a queen - sized bed with large flat - screen TV and DVD player, while the other one has twin beds and a small outdoor balcony - A corridor with built - in - robes connects the two bedrooms while also giving access to the shared bathroom - Shared bathroom features grey slate walls and flooring, indoor terrazzo bathtub and walk - in shower, additional outdoor shower with water feature - Large shared wooden deck - Air - conditioned GUEST SUITES 1 & 2: - Two - bedroom guesthouse located 50m from the main house for privacy - Queen - sized beds complimented by light and airy cream walls and teak floors - Garden bathrooms with indoor shower and glass sliding doors leading onto a wooden deck - Adjoining living area for the two rooms - Self - contained kitchen with breakfast bar and stools
Living in the stunning pine forests of southwestern France, being right next to the ocean and breathing fresh ocean air really helps me to connect to nature and gives me and my Yoga students the chance of a fantastic Yoga experience.
At the Spa, privately screened, open - air palapas under the shade of palm trees give you views of shimmering white sand and the brilliant blue Pacific Ocean beyond.
These Javelins will give players new powers and abilities such as the flight to soar through the open air or propel them through the depths of an ocean.
Regardless, I would posit the worsening winter ice formation is as expected given the poles suffer first and winters warm faster than summers, BUT that this is happening within two years of the EN peak, which was my time line in 2015, one wonders if the combination of warm EN - heated Pacific waters (oceans move slowly) and warm air are a trailing edge of the EN effect OR this is signallibg a phase change driven by that EN, or is just an extreme winter event.
Given that thin ice — as you explained — boosts heat transfer from ocean to air, is a focus on ice volume as an indicator of the «health» of the system (for lack of a better word) a distraction?
Think of what would happen if you could pump cold deep water up to the surface, increasing the air / sea temperature gradient and warming the water; that would give you an anomalously large ocean heat uptake.
I asked Lee and McPhaden how a connection to greenhouse - driven warming could be made, given the possibility that the Pacific shift could be the result of long - term oscillations in conditions in the ocean unrelated to the buildup of heat - trapping greenhouse gases in the air.
This would make sense given the ocean is probably the tail that wags the dog with climate and temperatures of the air react to the oceans, the tropical pacific being the big driver.
But I'm sure you can see that these transfers would give you air absorbing as much power as the ocean: Space — > Ocean = 240, Ocean — > Air = 240, Air — > Ocean = 5, Air — > Space = 2air absorbing as much power as the ocean: Space — > Ocean = 240, Ocean — > Air = 240, Air — > Ocean = 5, Air — > Space =ocean: Space — > Ocean = 240, Ocean — > Air = 240, Air — > Ocean = 5, Air — > Space =Ocean = 240, Ocean — > Air = 240, Air — > Ocean = 5, Air — > Space =Ocean — > Air = 240, Air — > Ocean = 5, Air — > Space = 2Air = 240, Air — > Ocean = 5, Air — > Space = 2Air — > Ocean = 5, Air — > Space =Ocean = 5, Air — > Space = 2Air — > Space = 230.
Given the fact the the bulk of the energy in the TOA imbalance is getting stored in the ocean, yet temperature anomalies over the ocean are less than over the land, for the above stated reasons, the global combined land and ocean (that is, air over the ocean) temperature anomalies actually tend to greatly understate to a the actual effects of the anthropogenic caused TOA anomaly.
Expecting less than 5 % of Earths surface to filter the air mass from the other 95 % given actual air circulation patterns is patently absurd compared to natural CO2 scrubbing mechanisms like the biological carbon cycles, or Henry's law (which is leading to ocean acidification.
My thinking continues to be that the relative strengths must indeed be altered by variations in solar insolation to the oceans given that the oceans have such a profound effect on the temperature of the air masses above them.
So the ocean has at least 340x the heat capacity and given air is an insulator, far more.
The advantage of recognising a reversed sign for the solar effect high up in the atmosphere is that it enables a scenario whereby the bottom up effects of ocean cycles and the top down effects of solar variability can be seen to be engaged in a complex ever changing dance with the primary climate response being changes in the tropospheric air circulation systems to give us the observed natural climate variability via cyclical latitudinal shifts in all the air circulation systems and notably the jet streams.
To point out just a couple of things: — oceans warming slower (or cooling slower) than lands on long - time trends is absolutely normal, because water is more difficult both to warm or to cool (I mean, we require both a bigger heat flow and more time); at the contrary, I see as a non-sense theory (made by some serrist, but don't know who) that oceans are storing up heat, and that suddenly they will release such heat as a positive feedback: or the water warms than no heat can be considered ad «stored» (we have no phase change inside oceans, so no latent heat) or oceans begin to release heat but in the same time they have to cool (because they are losing heat); so, I don't feel strange that in last years land temperatures for some series (NCDC and GISS) can be heating up while oceans are slightly cooling, but I feel strange that they are heating up so much to reverse global trend from slightly negative / stable to slightly positive; but, in the end, all this is not an evidence that lands» warming is led by UHI (but, this effect, I would not exclude it from having a small part in temperature trends for some regional area, but just small); both because, as writtend, it is normal to have waters warming slower than lands, and because lands» temperatures are often measured in a not so precise way (despite they continue to give us a global uncertainity in TT values which is barely the instrumental's one)-- but, to point out, HadCRU and MSU of last years (I mean always 2002 - 2006) follow much better waters» temperatures trend; — metropolis and larger cities temperature trends actually show an increase in UHI effect, but I think the sites are few, and the covered area is very small worldwide, so the global effect is very poor (but it still can be sensible for regional effects); but I would not run out a small warming trend for airport measurements due mainly to three things: increasing jet planes traffic, enlarging airports (then more buildings and more asphalt — if you follow motor sports, or simply live in a town / city, you will know how easy they get very warmer than air during day, and how much it can slow night - time cooling) and overall having airports nearer to cities (if not becoming an area inside the city after some decade of hurban growth, e.g. Milan - Linate); — I found no point about UHI in towns and villages; you will tell me they are not large cities; but, in comparison with 20-40-60 years ago when they were «countryside», many small towns and villages have become part of larger hurban areas (at least in Europe and Asia) so examining just larger cities would not be enough in my opinion to get a full view of UHI effect (still remembering that it has a small global effect: we can say many matters are due to UHI instead of GW, maybe even that a small part of measured GW is due to UHI, and that GW measurements are not so precise to make us able to make good analisyses and predictions, but not that GW is due to UHI).
It is that process which gives the weather systems an overwhelming power to vary quickly in response to any imbalance between energy flowing into the air from the oceans and into space from the air.
Other experts say there is no time for nuance, given the general lack of public response to the threat posed particularly by carbon dioxide, a by - product of fossil fuels and forests that persists for a century or more in the air and is accumulating rapidly in the atmosphere and changing the pH of the oceans.
This has given rise to a pattern of winds bringing in warm air from the south over the coastal seas of eastern Siberia, fostering strong melt and tending to push ice from the coast into the central Arctic Ocean.
Our opportunity here isn't only about protecting the ocean waters of America, marine life, a favorite surf break, jobs or a given beach community; it's about demanding that our government utilize the best available science and data and listen to the massive outpouring of public opposition to destructive offshore oil and gas development, to shift the tides of energy development instead away from fossil fuels and toward renewables; it's about holding our President and federal agencies accountable for decisions they make about the management of the ocean; it's about protecting the ocean and every coastline from the atrocity and injustice of offshore drilling and exploration; it's about protecting clean water, air and beaches now and for the future; it's about protecting one another, and the Earth.
It is time for scientists to give water (vapor) the respect it deserves not only as the ideal transporter of energy between oceans and air, and equator and poles, but as supreme ruler of the greenhouse gas kingdom.
f) all the additional energy coming from the increase of the back radiation is thermalized within the skin layer and then emitted back to the air by increasing radiation, convection, conduction and evaporation into the air so that none part of it is delivered to the ocean — otherwise it would give us the decrease of the cooling of the bulk temperature of the ocean;
This would give us the increase of mean temperature of the air layer above the ocean surface from 300K to 300.167 K during the ten years period.
Given Henry's gas law (50:1 ratio of ocean / air CO2 concentrations), when atmospheric CO2 levels were 2,000 ppm, there were roughly 192,500 gigatons of CO2 dissolved in the oceans or 154,000 GTs more than now and the oceans were still alkaline (around 7.6 pH) and teaming with life.
Given that > 93 % of warming is going into the oceans, ~ 2.3 % into the atmosphere, even a small rate change in ocean warming relative to the total greenhouse gas imbalance will have a huge effect on air temperatures.
Perhaps Realclimate.org should seek open a sub group on fringe theories to give some small air time to the other theories / solutions being considered (such as ocean mirrors etc.).
Hurricanes can be thought of, to a first approximation, as a heat engine; obtaining its heat input from the warm, humid air over the tropical ocean, and releasing this heat through the condensation of water vapor into water droplets in deep thunderstorms of the eyewall and rainbands, then giving off a cold exhaust in the upper levels of the troposphere (~ 12 km / 8 mi up).
Walking beside the ocean, passing quaint, colourful fishing huts, the sweeping aroma of fresh catch in the air soon gave way to quiet, lush, walled lanes enclosing farmers» fields, stone houses with orange tiled roofs and clusters of grapes forming canopies over paths.
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