According to several reports, a fresh
satellite analysis shows that new lands formed by sediment carried from the crumbling Himalayas are adding to Bangladesh's land area — at least for now.
Sorry, Brian, Carlin's statement that
the satellite analysis shows no significant temp increase between 1978 and 2008 is flat out false.
Not exact matches
They know about ratings and «audience
analysis»; they bounce their
shows off
satellites, and they are building CBN (Christian Broadcast Network) University, where believers will be taught the fundamentals of electronic journalism as well as a little theology.
An
analysis of records from NASA's Aqua
satellite between 2003 and 2014
shows that spikes in maximum surface temperatures occurred in the tropical forests of Africa and South America and across much of Europe and Asia in 2010 and in Greenland in 2012.
New
analysis of
satellite data, reported today in Science,
shows that deforestation on the island is hurtling on faster even than a pessimistic projection made by the World Bank 2 years ago.
Comprehensive
analysis of
satellite weather data
shows that these are indeed regions where significant reductions in storm activity are detected during the rainy season.
For example, a monthly
analysis of
satellite images by the Brazilian nonprofit Imazon
shows that in April 2015, more than twice as much forest had been cleared compared with the same month the previous year.
The Yale University - led
analysis, which combined on - the - ground surveys with
satellite data,
shows «the overwhelming effect of humans across most of the world,» the authors wrote.
His team's
analysis showed the apparent decline was due to calibration errors that meant the first
satellite — which operated from 1993 to 1999 — slightly overestimated sea levels.
The study is a «painstaking
analysis» of the fragmented
satellite record and
shows some consistency between models and observations of clouds, says meteorologist Bjorn Stevens of the Max Planck Institute for Meteorology in Hamburg, Germany.
An
analysis of the orbits of Saturn's new
satellites shows they cluster in groups.
A new
analysis of NASA
satellite data
shows Africa's Congo rainforest, the second - largest tropical rainforest in the world, has undergone a large - scale decline in greenness over the past decade.
Independent
analyses based solely on
satellite data
show that the proportion of high intensity hurricanes has been increasing in most places.
Detailed
analyses of publicly available
satellite photos
show that Brazil has reduced deforestation in the Amazon enough over the past five years to lower heat - trapping emissions more than any other country on Earth.
Homogenisation errors are already visible in a site - by - site
analysis, but this
shows the problems may be so big they affect averages across the whole of Australia, and we can detect them with
satellites.
Analysis of retrospective
satellite data
showed that the sustained thermal stress in the Caribbean during 2005 was more intense than any of the previous 20 years (Figure 2B).
Analysis of the
satellite data
shows a statistically significant cooling trend for the past 12 to 13 years, with it not being possible to reject a flat trend (0 slope) for between 16 and 22 years.
The new EIKE
analysis shows that SLR is consistently under 2 mm a year or about 17 cm a century or about 7 inches as do the GRACE
satellite measurements.
Movement
analysis of one
satellite - tracked killer whale travelling as part of a group of 20 + killer whales
showed that the whale remained in Prince Regent Inlet and in the northern part of the Gulf of Boothia from late August until early October, when locations overlapped aggregations of marine mammal prey species, including seals, narwhal, and bowhead whales (Matthews et al. 2011).
An
analysis of the available
satellite records from UAH and RSS
shows that within the only global warming within the last 31 years was a short spurt that started in 1998, in four years raised global temperature by a third of a degree, and then stopped.
The latter two
analyses are in principle affected by artificially reduced trends in the
satellite data (Hurrell and Trenberth, 1999), though the data we
show include recent attempts to reduce this.
Three
analyses of the NASA NVAP
satellite data
show little or no empirical correlation between either surface temperature or atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration, Solomon et al in fact
shows a 10 % decrease in stratospheric water vapour in the decade pre-2000.
Modern
analyses of
satellite images could also
show the decrease in individual tree canopy size if trees lost big branches and only regrew them slowly.
The poster child recently for this absurdity has been the GPS system, and recently there was some clock put on a
satellite which they claimed proved speed slowed down the clock, which on closer inspection
showed the same wishful thinking as we note in reading the variety of models produced of an alien world with a cold Sun and no atmosphere passing itself off a this one — here, a real world
analysis by a real world scientist blanked out by consensus:
The warming in the ACORN - SAT dataset is very similar to that
shown in international
analyses of Australian temperature data and very closely matches
satellite data and warming of sea surface temperatures around Australia.
Late last month, scientists from Woods Hole Research Center and Boston University published in Science an
analysis of
satellite data
showing one of the most dramatic turnabouts in recent memory.
New
analyses of balloon - borne and
satellite measurements of lower - and mid-tropospheric temperature
show warming rates that are similar to those of the surface temperature record and are consistent within their respective uncertainties, largely reconciling a discrepancy noted in the TAR.
Opinion A new
analysis of data from dedicated
satellites shows that one of the main factors predicted to drive rising sea levels in future has been seriously overestimated, with major implications for climate talks currently underway in Doha.
How interesting then, that the latest
analysis of 88million measurements from the European Space Agency's Cryosat
satellite show the northern ice - cap INCREASED by a staggering 41 per cent in 2013 and, despite a modest shortage last year, is bigger than at any time for decades.
in the early part of this decade Bob Carter used to love the Spencer and Cristy's
satellite data
showing no warming trend but curiously his views did not change when their
analysis was
shown to be flawed.
Within the field of forensic image and video
analysis one of the biggest issues we face is the CSI effect: the phenomenon whereby representations of forensic science on popular TV
shows gives a distorted perception of what is possible; from endless zooming from
satellite imagery, to enhancing the reflection of a reflection of a reflection.