Sentences with phrase «view from the space»

The Sun's color is white, when viewed from space or when high in the sky.
One of Kelly's favorite places to view from space was the Bahamas — a nation comprised of some 700 islands and cays.
«If viewed from space 23 million years ago, though, Central Asia would have looked somewhat darker, simply due to there being considerably more leaves and vegetation.»
Malawi in maps Quiz Trophic (feeding) adaptations «Haps «listed alphabetically «Haps «listed by pattern «Haps «picture list Mbuna listed alphabetically Mbuna picture list Non-endemic «Haps» Tilapias Non-cichlids Invertebrates Lake Malawi viewed from space!
The National Science Foundation's (NSF's) Division of Astronomical Sciences (AST) in its Mathematical and Physical Sciences (MPS) Directorate, funds world - class facilities that use cutting - edge technology providing images that rival the view from space.
Navulur said that satellite imagery provides such a precise view from space «that we are able to proactively observe environmental changes which unravel human footprints from thousands of years ago, such as the Ararat anomaly, and contribute to space archeology in a real and meaningful manner.»
There is also very little atmosphere above this altitude so most of what we see will be similar to a view from space.
Ryan's joined by seasoned, retirement - bound astronaut Matt (George Clooney, as alternately goofy and confident as ever), who tosses off stories of Mardi Gras in 1987 — juxtaposing the casual layman banality of everyday conversation against the distractingly beautiful multi-miled view from space — as well as self - esteem - boosting pep talks.
Zoom out for a view from space, or focus in close enough to see the soccer field.)
Now we can collect important information about volcano shape, temperature and changes in those parameters using satellites that provide the view from space.
The reef here is so large it can be viewed from space.
My own prediction is that, as temperatures fail to increase over the next five years, attention will turn to Ray Ladbury's «bite» — the resonant absorption of outgoing radiation by CO2 and H2O in the radiation spectrum viewed from space.
Perhaps, as Azevedo and co. suggest, the planet, when viewed from space, might instead be illuminated with candlelight had incandescent light bulbs not come along.
Viewed from space, some of the earth's most pronounced features are the blue of the vast oceans, the white swirls of moisture - laden clouds and bright swaths of ice covering the poles.
He says that means, aside from some scattered icebergs and clusters of pack ice, the view from space in the fall of, say, 2040, will be of a blue Arctic Ocean.
Engineers and scientists from US universities analysed vegetation cover in the region prior to the storm to see if the Syrian civil war had changed the land surface drastically enough to mask the view from space.
shares the view from space to inspire people to protect the environment.
SkyTruth is a 501 (c)(3) non-profit that shares the view from space to inspire people to protect the environment.
Earth and earthlings... we live life on the littoral, Earth's great continents adrift in a world awash with seas, crested waves rifting their shores, fugitive mists, winds, rain, storms we can't predict more than a day or so out, human sapiens, other critters, vegetable life, evolving in Darwinian mutating ways; Planet Earth, viewed from space, like a snapshot from the gods, a shimmering orb netted in a cloud haze.
Earlier this month, NASA scientists provided a visualization of a startling climate change trend — the Earth is getting greener, as viewed from space, especially in its rapidly warming northern regions.
Viewed from space, the city is a patchwork of dark (often black) surfaces, along with white and other colored rooftops.
I'd like to comment the «However, it is clear that my result, based on matching 240 Watts / m ^ 2, is within a reasonable range of the true mean temperature of the Earth System as viewed from Space
However, it is clear that my result, based on matching 240 Watts / m ^ 2, is within a reasonable range of the true mean temperature of the Earth System as viewed from Space.
Using satellite measurements, this analysis directly quantifies how much the Arctic as viewed from space has darkened in response to the recent sea ice retreat.
Nasa, ISS on Vimeo — Earth Time Lapse View from Space Fly Over — Michael König editor — Enough death.
We've got the view from space, whence looking down on things somehow doesn't seem quite so judgmental.

Not exact matches

Use the slider below to compare two space - based views of the research center, from Friday, before the strike, and Sunday, after the strike.
Maybe you don't have a view of a sandy beach and turquoise waters from your window, but working from home successfully means taking your dedicated space and making it into a place where you feel good and actually want to spend time: furniture, decor, and comfort.
However, a few satellites with high - power cameras and special sensors offer unique and detailed views of the evolving disaster from space.
This view is from the European Space Agency's Sentinel - 2 satellite.
A new feature in the tram lobby will offer visitors on the ground a live webcam stream of the view from the observation space at the top of the Arch.
The view from the beta space of New Lab in the Brooklyn Navy Yard overlooking the construction site for the new facility.
«I think it's one more message from the SEC that they view coins as securities and they encourage everyone in the space to... follow securities laws,» said Jason Gottlieb, partner at Morrison Cohen, where he leads the cryptocurrency litigation team.
When a natural disaster is so widespread — reaching all the way from the Leeward Islands in the Caribbean to now the Southeast of the United States — it can take a space - based view to put it all in perspective.
In the years to come, the entrepreneurial space industry will benefit immeasurably from the influx of disruptive ideas and unique points of view that will accompany this changing demographic.
«The great attraction was the Hudson River view and the fact that it was raw space, so we could create something from scratch,» says Leat, an investment banker and philanthropic fundraiser.
Whiteheadians seem able to imagine such ecstatically spanned unities - across - time on the so - called «microscopic» scale of the «specious present,» but give up on the idea as the scope of the temporal disclosure space is widened to the scale of human lifetime and of generations.7 But worse than this from the point of view of Heidegger's temporal problematic, by submitting the ecstatic unities of their «specious presents» to the before / after ordering and metric properties of linear time, at least in terms of their mutually external relations and arrangements, they give back ontologically every advantage they gained from the use of an cc - static - temporal disclosure horizon in the first place, even though it was only the single horizon of presence.
God is not simply hidden from view, nor is he lurking in the depths of our unconscious or on the boundaries of our infinite space, nor will he appear on the next turn of an historical wheel of fate.
When an autonomous nature and an infinite space dawned in the Renaissance, the world was no longer manifest as the creation, and with the subsequent triumph of modern science, contingency in the medieval sense has disappeared from view.
There's nothing to exclude the possibility that time / space (if viewed from an outside perspective) might look like an hourglass with the singularity as the «pinch» in the hourglass.
Viewed from the overlook, the 36 - foot - tall Last Column — the last, that is, to be removed from Ground Zero — fails to activate the space.
He can zoom our and view us from an eternal perspective, i.e. he can look at us from beyond time and space, seeing the end from the beginning.
Whitehead is seeing that if you are having a radical view, starting from events and flying to get space - time, with his insistence on sense - awareness and durations for the strong notion of an event, this is going to affect everything all along the line.
As Professor Ford noted, this is significantly different from the «Newtonian view of space and time that Whitehead criticizes in PR.
Orion looks like a «belt» from Earth (and perhaps from a few other viewing points around the universe), but in fact the stars do not sit next to each other in space, but are quite far apart.
In a few thousand years of recorded history, we went from dwelling in caves and mud huts and tee - pees, not understanding the natural world around us, or the broader universe, to being able to travel through space, using reason to ferret out the hidden secrets of how the world works, from physics to chemistry to biology, we worked out the tools and rules underpinning it all, mathematics, and now we can see objects that are almost impossibly small, the very tiniest building blocks of matter, (or at least we can examine them, even if you can't «see» them because you're using something other than your eyes and photons to view them) to the very farthest objects, the planets circling other, distant stars, that are in their own way, too small to see from here, like the atoms and parts of atoms themselves, detected indirectly, but indisputably THERE.
From the point of view of an electron there are light years of space between one atom in my body and the next.
The three - decker world view of ancient man, and the contemporary space universe which stems from Copernicus and Galileo are so different from each other, that every aspect of the Christian faith on which cosmology impinges must be radically reinterpreted.
But the disappearance of this kind of heaven from our space universe according to our contemporary world view removes this version of the Resurrection and the Ascension from the miraculous to the meaningless.
Finally, Whitehead's methodology of descriptive generalization would, on the micrological view, be seen as belonging within a particular tradition, i.e., as involving what might be called a «metaphysical reduction» of the empirical world to some foundational and actual element, on the same methodological lines as Leibniz's monads, Bradley's substrative feeling, Alexander's space - time matrix, or Heidegger's Being.12 In other words, Whitehead's actual entities are conceived as having a special kind of actuality of their own as the ground or foundation from which the empirical world derives.
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