Sentences with phrase «since over the temperature»

Not exact matches

I'm all cool with snow and slightly chilly temperatures up to Christmas since I think I could be classified as an elf for how much I love that time of year, BUT once the best day of the year is over and gone, dreary January takes over.
When the temperature is 32 degrees or colder, the over is 104 -73-4 (58.8 %) since 2003.
As you can see, since the 2010 season, anytime the game - time temperature is 90 degrees or more, betting the OVER (specifically when it is between 7 and 8.5) has produced in an impressive 52 - 37 record (58.4 % win rate) and 13.6 % ROI.
Since 2003, the over has gone 128 - 100 (56.1 %) when the temperature is 32 degrees (F) or lower.
The table below displays the results for betting the Over in every NFL game with a game - time temperature of 32 degrees or below since the start of the 2005 season.
First, they compared simulated and observed temperature trends over all 15 - year periods since the start of the 20th century.
For example, in western US, drought and higher temperatures have doubled the rate of tree mortality since 1995, with mortality rates accelerating over time.
The average observed increase since 1900 is 0.92 K. Most increases in temperature occur over the Arctic, which is melting quickly.
According to NOAA scientists, the globally averaged temperature over land and ocean surfaces for August 2014 was the highest for August since record keeping began in 1880.
The world's surface temperatures have risen at a slower rate over the past 15 years than at any time since 1951, according to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.
However, make no mistake, the globe's average temperature has still risen over that period (including record heat in 2014) and temperatures now are the hottest they've been since recordkeeping began in the 1880s.
The public, press and policy makers have been repeatedly told that three claims have widespread scientific support: Global temperature has risen about a degree since the late 19th century; levels of CO2 in the atmosphere have increased by about 30 % over the same period; and CO2 should contribute to future warming.
U.S. Data Since 1895 Fail To Show Warming Trend LINK WASHINGTON, Jan. 25 — After examining climate data extending back nearly 100 years, a team of Government scientists has concluded that there has been no significant change in average temperatures or rainfall in the United States over that entire period.
In addition to the surface data described above, measurements of temperature above the surface have been made with weather balloons, with reasonable coverage over land since 1958, and from satellite data since 1979.
Since the data show southern Greenland temperatures over the last 150 years, it would be most useful to look at model simulations for exactly that period, run with the best guesses for CO2, solar and volcanic forcing etc..
The westerlies in the Northern Hemisphere, which increased from the 1960s to the 1990s but which have since returned to about normal as part of NAO and NAM changes, alter the flow from oceans to continents and are a major cause of the observed changes in winter storm tracks and related patterns of precipitation and temperature anomalies, especially over Europe.
The former is likely to overestimate the true global surface air temperature trend (since the oceans do not warm as fast as the land), while the latter may underestimate the true trend, since the air temperature over the ocean is predicted to rise at a slightly higher rate than the ocean temperature.
«The surge in global temperatures since 1977 can be attributed to a 1976 climate shift in the Pacific Ocean that made warming El Niño conditions more likely than they were over the previous 30 years and cooling La Niña conditions less likely» says corresponding author de Freitas.
Easterbrook's implication that global temperatures have varied by more the 20 times the medieval temperature anomaly over the Holocene is simply laughable (only if you include the deglaciation might that be true, but since that was before the onset even of settled human communities it seems less than relevant).
The history of decadal variability suggests that temperatures will decline (since 1998) over the next couple of decades — well before which the entire science community is utterly discredited.
The dimeric or tandem dimer versions of EosFP are preferred over the monomeric one since the formation of mEosFP's chromophore requires a temperature below 30 °C and this is not ideal for experiments in mammalian cells.
This result is thought to reflect the effect of a supermassive black hole, since it would be impossible to maintain such high - temperature state over the region of several hundred light years in general star forming activities.
Since it stays in the atmosphere longer, it will raise the temperature gradually over the decades.
Ocean surfaces have warmed considerably over the last few years, and since oceans cover roughly tw0 - thirds of the globe's area, it is reasonable to examine how sea surface temperature evolution has played into the short - term evolution of GMST.
The globally averaged temperature over land and ocean surfaces for 2015 was the highest among all years since record keeping began in 1880.
This single - year snapshot of the planet's warmth fits with the pattern of ever - warmer temperatures that has been in place over the past century, particularly since the early 1980s as the warming fueled by an accumulation of greenhouse gases clearly emerged.
According to a 2013 report by Climate Central, nationwide nighttime winter temperatures since 1970 have risen about 30 percent faster than nighttime temperatures over the entire year.
In order for Mercury's core to have stayed molten over some 4.5 billions of years since the planet first formed from agglomerating planetisimals, however, its mostly iron core must also contain a lighter element, such as sulfur, to lower the melting temperature of the core material.
«We show that at the present - day warming of 0.85 °C about 18 % of the moderate daily precipitation extremes over land are attributable to the observed temperature increase since pre-industrial times, which in turn primarily results from human influence,» the research team said.
These conditions also have been accompanied by record high maximum temperatures over Australia during 2005 (a comparable national series is only available since 1951).
The public, press and policy makers have been repeatedly told that three claims have widespread scientific support: Global temperature has risen about a degree since the late 19th century; levels of CO2 [carbon dioxide] in the atmosphere have increased by about 30 percent over the same period; and CO2 should contribute to future warming.
i started with my favorite sleeveless chambray — since we're experiencing a major heat wave — but you could definitely do a long - sleeved version if the temperatures are cooler where you are (heck, layer a cashmere sweater over it for an even cozier look).
Since the temperature dropped abruptly the past few days though, up here in Boston, suddenly my car is taking 3 - 5 attempts before the engine turns over.
By a similar reasoning, since the cooling capacity of the system is influenced also by the airflow over the evaporator at a present time (along by the flow of liquid refrigerant through it and its exchange surface), the cabin's temperature is influenced by the fan speed.
Since no warm - blooded animal can survive once its temperature is over 108 °F (42.2 °C) due to a coagulation of body proteins, monitoring your pet for signs of fever is important.
-- is it right to say that this study doesn't show any significative influence of anthropogenic, post -1970 warming on SLR, since the SLR reacts mainly with a very large time constant and averages the temperature over a time much longer than 40 years?
In addition, since the global surface temperature records are a measure that responds to albedo changes (volcanic aerosols, cloud cover, land use, snow and ice cover) solar output, and differences in partition of various forcings into the oceans / atmosphere / land / cryosphere, teasing out just the effect of CO2 + water vapor over the short term is difficult to impossible.
Tropical Andes temperature increased at a rate of at least.1 degrees C per decade since 1939, and the rate has more than tripled over the past 25 years.
Since Bill Gray's name came up again here, it might be worth mentioning I finally called him yesterday to offer a bet over his prediction that temperatures will decrease in 5 - 8 years.
«in the United States, extremes of high temperatures have been occurring at a rate of twice those of cold extremes (Meehl et al. 2009), and this has accelerated considerably since June 2010 to a factor of 2.7, and in the summer of 2011 to a factor of over 8 ″
More than 95 % of the 5 yr running mean of the surface temperature change since 1850 can be replicated by an integration of the sunspot data (as a proxy for ocean heat content), departing from the average value over the period of the sunspot record (~ 40SSN), plus the superimposition of a ~ 60 yr sinusoid representing the observed oceanic oscillations.
The problem here is that estimates of changes in sea surface temperature and the depth of the warm mixed layer might be very unreliable, since the general behavior of the Atlantic circulation is only now being directly observed — and the most recent findings are that flow rates vary over a whole order of magnitude:
perhaps because over that cherrypicked 27 year period 1913 to 1940, when CO2 was much lower and rising much slower than it is now, the natural variation in solar output was up, whereas despite the natural variation in solar output being down since 1980, temperatures and CO2 are up.
It's the latest research in more than a decade of work producing a climate «hockey stick» — graphs of global or regional temperatures showing relatively little variation over a millennium or more and then a sharp uptick since the middle of the twentieth century (the blade at the end of the stick).
However, if the roughly 10 - year oscillation of global temperature we have seen over the last several decades (be it due to the solar cycle or internal) holds on, we will see a considerable temperature increase during the coming years, since we are at the minimum now.
The core finding is that temperatures over the continents have warmed about 1 degree Centigrade (1.8 degrees Fahrenheit) since 1950, matching earlier independent analyses by American and British climate researchers that had been repeatedly attacked by climate skeptics and opponents of curbs in greenhouse emissions.
The paper was accompanied by a press release entitled «Global Warming not a Man - made Phenomenon», in which Shaviv was quoted as stating, «The operative significance of our research is that a significant reduction of the release of greenhouse gases will not significantly lower the global temperature, since only about a third of the warming over the past century should be attributed to man».
Global mean temperature since the last ice age has oscillated quasi-periodically between about + / - 1 % of its mean; over that time, the mean has slightly declined, as have the maxima and minima of the excursions.
Now since relative humidity remains roughly constant at the ocean surface and the air's capacity to hold water increases with temperature, relative humidity will actually decrease over land, particularly as one enters the continental interiors.
A combination of low winter snow accumulation and warm spring temperatures created a new record low spring snow cover duration over the Arctic in 2010, since satellite observations began in 1966.
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