Here in Iowa (and in many places across the Great Plains), wind turbines are becoming something of a common
sight along the horizon, and solar panels can be put into use almost anywhere.
Not exact matches
The Post... * Wonderstruck: aerial night view of Trailways bus slipping into the Lincoln Tunnel
along pink trajectory... * Atomic Blonde: The fight on the stairs, and then part two... * A Ghost Story: moving van's reflection on window, swinging out of
sight down road... * Mudbound: laughter and tears at homecoming... * Stephen Root pronouncing «melancholic,» Get Out... * Sublimely daft rhythms of MoMA reception, The Meyerowitz Stories (New and Selected)... * Man pedaling boy's bike, city lights on
horizon — Suburbicon...
In 1896 Swedish chemist and Nobel laureate Svante Arrhenius used Langley's bolometer to measure the heat from the Moon at various altitudes above the
horizon in order to estimate the dependence of atmospheric heat trapping on amount of water vapor and CO2
along the line of
sight to the Moon, a much longer path near the
horizon than at 45 degrees.