Our shots of Midtown Manhattan at sunset
showed warm oranges and reds, and details such as windows on faraway buildings were clear.
Not exact matches
Sea surface temperatures above 78 degrees,
shown here in yellow,
orange and red, are sufficiently
warm to fuel hurricanes.
Lycopene is a singular pigment within a family of plant pigments called carotenoids and is responsible for the red color in our fruits and veggie — while the larger, umbrella carotenoid family is responsible for the
warmer colors of the rainbow (
oranges, yellows, reds, etc) and have all been
shown to have potent antioxidant activity.
As
shown in the picture below, green and
orange works well as a base as the two of them is rather
warm.
The solo exhibition «Fear of Waves» at Canada (January 9 — February 14)
showed another veteran painter, Katherine Bradford, in fine form with hazy,
warm paintings populated by rosy - and
orange - skinned figures.
In order to make the trends comparable despite the different periods and CO2 increases, they were divided by the globally averaged
warming trend, i.e. all values above 1
show an above - average
warming (
orange - red), values below 1 a below - average
warming, negative values a cooling.
The startling temperature clock
shows the UN panel's 1990 predictions as
orange and red zones meeting at the red needle representing its then central prediction that by now there should have been global
warming equivalent to 2.8 degrees / century.
Figure above: Global maps which
show the cooling (purples - blues - green) and
warming (yellow -
orange - red) tendencies for the present (top row), for the A1B projection in the year 2050 (second row), and for B1 in 2050 (third row).
The speedometer for the 15 years 4 months January 2001 to April 2016
shows the [1.1, 4.2] C ° / century - equivalent interval of global
warming rates (red /
orange) that IPCC's 1990, 1995 and 2001 reports predicted should be occurring by now, compared with real - world, observed
warming (green) equivalent to less than 0.5 C ° / century over the period.
The solid
orange lines (right hand axes)
shows the 50th percentile (thick) and 66th percentile (thin) of the climate responses to this emissions scenario when coupled with aggressive reductions in non-CO2 contributions to
warming.
While global mean temperature and tropical Atlantic SSTs
show pronounced and statistically significant
warming trends (green curves), the U.S. landfalling hurricane record (
orange curve)
shows no significant increase or decrease.
Oranges, reds, yellows and other
warm colors like this don't
show the problem unless you look really closely, but cooler colors are definitely more obvious.
Research on color responses has
shown that
warm colors, such as
orange and red, can increase excitement and energy, whereas cooler hues, such as blue, can be calming and relaxing.
If you like
orange accents, these color schemes
show how beautiful, fresh, and modern the greens, browns, pinks, blue, and gray color tones look with
warm hues.
If you've
warmed to the thought of using
orange in your home, you'll love this slide
show that features a variety of looks in this citrus hue.