Sentences with phrase «signs of a cooling trend»

In other Bay Area housing market news, real estate professionals from around the region are reporting what they feel are the early signs of a cooling trend.
So yes, temperatures have leveled out for now, but at a high level, with no real sign of any cooling trend.
In fact, we are starting to see some signs of a cooling trend right now.

Not exact matches

Whatever got it started, the last - names - as - first - names trend is hot and shows no signs of cooling off anytime soon.
In fact, the momentum scores for both cities seem to bear that trend out: Ottawa and Guelph are entering a cooling phase, and the average number of real estate sales compared to listings in both cities is starting to decline — a clear sign of a weakening housing market.
A steady decline — and eventual cessation — of sunspot activity, which normally triggers with a cooling period on Earth, in this case coincides with the most rapid period of warming in human history with no sign of an end to the upward trend.
... [M] ost of the trends observed since satellite climate monitoring began in 1979 CE can not yet be distinguished from natural (unforced) climate variability, and are of the opposite sign [cooling] to those produced by most forced climate model simulations over the same post-1979 CE interval.»
In particular, P trends in northern Europe (Scandinavia and Scotland) and in countries bordering the Mediterranean Sea can change sign, while SAT trends over northern Europe and Russia can range from near zero or even slight cooling to over 4 °C, depending on the polarity of the 2σ NAO trend.
It follows that more global precipitation is a sign of cooling whereas less global precipitation is a sign of warming but for the purposes of this article I am looking for a more consistent weather indicator of global temperature trend.
When I do it, my argument in response to too - short trendlines sometimes is to supply alternative trendlines for exactly the same period that show the opposite sign, as proof by counterexample to indicate the specific trendline suggested is invalid; sometimes to supply long - enough trendlines when such are available, to illustrate a more correct method; sometimes to apply a methodologically valid use of short trendlines within a framework of a longer timespan and suggest the appropriate Bayesian treatment to predict the very low likelihood of the true trend being actually cooling given the too short trendline.
If the current cooling trend is a sign of AGW, what would have to happen to signal the IPCC to stop pushing AGW?
Again, it is left as an exercise for the audience to compute the probability of (say) 6 successive adjustments for supposedly trended method error that all happen to have the same sign and the same effect, to comparatively cool the past and warm the present, but that's another story.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z