Sentences with phrase «settings with high concentrations»

Not exact matches

Biceps Concentration Curls (alternate with Preacher Curls) 3 sets of 8 - 10 reps Incline Curls (alternate with Incline Hammer Curls) 3 sets of 10 - 12 reps Hammer Curls (alternate with High Pulley Curls) 3 sets of 12 - 15 reps
In a diet - induced weight - loss setting among overweight and obese individuals, higher baseline plasma PFAS concentrations were significantly associated with greater weight regain, especially in women, accompanied by a slower regression of RMR.
Schools not offering the subsidized lunch program also tended to overlap with schools having a higher concentration of white students, highly suggestive of the existence of a set of charter schools serving disproportionate numbers of non-poor, white students.
Along with the budget, the governor proposed a set of policy changes — based on a report co-written by former Stanford education professor Michael Kirst, currently the president of the California State Board of Education — that would grant additional funding to schools with a high concentration of low - income and English learner students.
I set out to answer what I thought were a few simple questions: How much money has the state invested in the biggest districts with the highest concentrations of disadvantaged students?
This sets Minneapolis apart from other cities with high concentrations of minority and low - income students.
By spreading exposure evenly across the opportunity set, equal - weight indexes avoid the concentration that can occur in market - cap - weighted indexes, giving you the higher upside potential of small cap with the overall stability of large cap.
Scientists caution that even though the world is warming over time, with the amount of heat - trapping greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere now unsettlingly ensconced at the highest level in human history, every year is not expected to set a new record.
«Climate science» as it is used by warmists implies adherence to a set of beliefs: (1) Increasing greenhouse gas concentrations will warm the Earth's surface and atmosphere; (2) Human production of CO2 is producing significant increases in CO2 concentration; (3) The rate of rise of temperature in the 20th and 21st centuries is unprecedented compared to the rates of change of temperature in the previous two millennia and this can only be due to rising greenhouse gas concentrations; (4) The climate of the 19th century was ideal and may be taken as a standard to compare against any current climate; (5) global climate models, while still not perfect, are good enough to indicate that continued use of fossil fuels at projected rates in the 21st century will cause the CO2 concentration to rise to a high level by 2100 (possibly 700 to 900 ppm); (6) The global average temperature under this condition will rise more than 3 °C from the late 19th century ideal; (7) The negative impact on humanity of such a rise will be enormous; (8) The only alternative to such a disaster is to immediately and sharply reduce CO2 emissions (reducing emissions in 2050 by 80 % compared to today's rate) and continue further reductions after 2050; (9) Even with such draconian CO2 reductions, the CO2 concentration is likely to reach at least 450 to 500 ppm by 2100 resulting in significant damage to humanity; (10) Such reductions in CO2 emissions are technically feasible and economically affordable while providing adequate energy to a growing world population that is increasingly industrializing.
They use the longer time series that is available with the NCEP water vapor data set with reservations, but at the same time attempting to use that part of the data set that has been considered by other authors to be more reliable (at higher water vapor concentrations) and for time periods considered more reliable.
The high - density observations from NASA's OCO - 2 mission, coupled with surface ocean CO2 measurements from NOAA buoys, have provided us with a unique data set to track the atmospheric CO2 concentrations and unravel the timing of the response of the ocean and the terrestrial carbon cycle during the 2015 — 2016 El Niño.
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