Sentences with phrase «temperature gain»

It only takes a few seconds to heat up, and it has a huge temperature gain (again, great in extremely cold climates).
Conversely a low forcing giving rise to the same observed temperature gain implies a high climate sensitivity.
This has never made much sense in the context of greenhouse warming theory (though its proponents have tied themselves into pretzels trying to explain it) since global warming theory (as embodied in the last IPCC report) holds that the largest temperature gains should be in the lower troposphere over the tropics, and offers no reason why the warming in the Artic should be orders of magnitude larger than in the Antarctic.
The goal of the treaty is to limit temperature gains since the industrial revolution to 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit), though island nations are seeking a target of 1.5 degrees to protect them from rising sea levels.
Yet recent temperature gains in climate may be accelerating the glaciers» melting and introducing more meltwater into aquifers and then the rivers.
Delegates were working on language that would aim to keep temperature gains to 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit).
* In June 2013, a German research institute which advises Angela Merkel's government concluded that «policy makers must come up with a new global target to cap temperature gains because the current goal... limiting the increase in temperature to 2 °C since industrialization is unrealistic».
global warming theory (as embodied in the last IPCC report) holds that the largest temperature gains should be in the lower troposphere over the tropics, and offers no reason why the warming in the Artic should be orders of magnitude larger than in the Antarctic.
Ambitions to further limit temperature gains, beyond 2 °C, would require even bigger efforts.
Cracking the windows makes no difference in the temperature gain.
The researchers found that all scenarios that stabilize the concentration of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere at or below 480 parts per million of carbon dioxide are «likely» to contain the temperature gain to below 2 degrees Celsius.
The only reason I used CO2 alone was because I thought that was Steve M's original intention — a pure prediction of the temperature gain from Callendar.
Temperature gains are larger at the sea surface, which heats faster than the ocean as a whole.
In other words, at least in the United States, the past decade's cooling wiped out two - thirds of the temperature gain of the last century.
The Pacific, and what happens in local waters in its east and west is the focus of ENSO studies and these phenomena are commonly compared to the march in global temperatures but its what happens in the global ocean that is really important for temperature gain and loss on a global basis.
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