The temperature is definitely a nice thing to see, seeing as gaming does usually make phones a bit
warmer than normal.
Sure, objectively speaking, the feature makes the display less accurate — as I write this, I'm in our dim studio and the iPhone 8 has adjusted its display to be a little
warmer than normal.
Though polar amplification — which is another term for how global warming spurs the poles to heat up faster than the rest of the world — helped to generate the upper level features in the atmosphere that would consistently generate storms running across the U.S. East Coast, widespread
warmer than normal ocean waters helped to give these storms more fuel.
As the Jet Stream dip became more oriented toward the East Coast during March, storms that would ultimately blow up over the Atlantic at first got a big plug of moisture from the extra evaporation flowing off
that warmer than normal Gulf.
This created a kind of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde relationship between winter and summer in which high Arctic winter temps seemed outrageously
warmer than normal even as summer snapped back to more typical Arctic averages in the furthest north locations.
The planet was 1.6 °F (0.88 °C)
warmer than normal last month, trailing 2016 by just a 10th of a degree.
In fact, the period of 1997/98 -2006 / 07, with the exception of 2000/01, were historically
warmer than normal (the most warm winters in a row by a long shot with data going back to 1820 in Minneapolis).
Continuing the loaded dice analogy, Hansen says that rather than two - sides of a die representing
warmer than normal weather, we're now in a situation where four sides of the die represent
warmer than normal weather, with one of those faces being extreme heat.
Whereas SATs and SSTs may be very different (since air warms and cools much faster than water), their anomalies are very similar (if the water temperature is 5 degrees above normal, the air right above the water is also likely to be about 5 degrees
warmer than normal).
So the world is undeniably on the warm side of average (I won't way
warmer than normal because what is «normal»?)
In his presentation, Gerry Bell, Like Lautenbacher, associated conditions since 1995 to «multi-decadal signal along with
warmer than normal sea surface temperatures.»
NASA global July temp not yet published, but thumbnail - map reveals 0.71 C
warmer than normal; would be hottest ever: http://bit.ly/Gisthom
wayne said: Clouds make warmer nights because the clouds are usually
warmer than the normal air temperature at that altitude and therefore the surface's rate of loss by radiation upward will be less leaving you with a warmer than normal night.
When the northern oceans are
warmer than normal, they freeze later in the season, and since they emit to an almost perfect black body (deep space with no sunlight) they release much more heat and take up very little, esp.
Clouds make warmer nights because the clouds are usually
warmer than the normal air temperature at that altitude and therefore the surface's rate of loss by radiation upward will be less leaving you with a warmer than normal night.
Actually, to be pedantic, on a hemispheric basis it's the Northern Hemisphere that is
warmer than normal just now.
The laws of physics say: part of the troposphere can get colder than normal — only when other part gets
warmer than normal.
Can someone tell me where exactly it is
warmer than normal to give us a top ten warmest global temperature at present?
Warmer than normal temperatures are shown in red and cooler than normal temperatures are shown in blue.
Equatorial waters are getting
warmer than normal, because oils and fats — north Atlantic, Mediterranean, Antarctic Ocean waters colder.
In the Moscow region the average temperature for the whole of July was around 7 °C
warmer than normal — it was around 25 °C.
Although 2015 had a cold start, temperatures in the fourth quarter were
warmer than normal throughout most of the United States.
Henry Hub spot prices began the year relatively low and fell throughout 2015, as production and storage inventories hit record levels and fourth - quarter temperatures were much
warmer than normal.
The southeast which has had
a warmer than normal year is much closer to the normal for this time of year now.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration announced Thursday that the U.S. average temperature last year was half a degree
warmer than normal and weather was less disastrous and drought - struck than previous years.
And the very high amounts of snow in northern New York occurred because the Great Lakes were
warmer than normal and so did not freeze over, allowing water to evaporate and fall as snow over northern New York.
Throughout last year, various groups predicted a shift to El Niño, which even without global warming generally leads to global average temperatures
warmer than normal during the year it pops up.
That's not even right; the 1940s are arguably when the land and ocean temperatures were much
warmer than normal for the first time in decades.
Clouds during the day cause lower temperatures (assuming no wind) and clouds at night cause
warmer than normal temperatures because heat isn't radiating into space.
For the first time ever, scientists have captured video of a coral reef bleaching, which occurs when waters that are
warmer than normal cause coral to eject the algae that reside in their tissues and provide them with food as well as their vibrant colors.
January and February obliterated global temperature records, and nowhere more so than in the Arctic which saw some locations 16C (29F)
warmer than normal.
While the world is still waiting for confirmation of just how high the record was, there's a lot of data to digest from the U.S. Nearly every square inch of the country was dramatically
warmer than normal.
Selectively using individual places, where is
warmer than normal — but avoiding my proofs and the laws of physics, that: in the same time, other place / places MUST be colder — it's the same Evil Cult.
Every five years or so, a change in the winds causes a shift to
warmer than normal sea surface temperatures in the equatorial Pacific Ocean — known as El Niño.
From that he asserts that the Arctic at that time — and all other previous times — had «one region
warmer than normal while another region was cooler».
A section on current conditions shows the last two months are characterized by relatively normal atmospheric conditions over the Arctic Ocean, but
warmer than normal conditions over the subpolar seas and land around the Arctic Ocean.
The Arctic has historically shown regional variations in climate, with one region
warmer than normal while another region was cooler, and then after a while flipping to the opposite conditions.
As the mercury plummeted to 40 below last weekend in Alaska's Interior, temperatures around the North Pole topped - out some 70 degrees higher — about 32 degrees Fahrenheit, some 50 degrees Fahrenheit
warmer than normal at the pole.
Throughout the geographic temperature map provided by NASA, we find that most global regions experienced much
warmer than normal temperatures — with the equatorial, tropical, and Northern Hemisphere zones showing the greatest departures.
But this claim is discredited by University of Washington climatologist Cliff Mass, who after examining precipitation levels in the Gulf found that «[t] here is no evidence that global warming is influencing Texas coastal precipitation in the long term and little evidence that
warmer than normal temperatures had any real impact on the precipitation intensity from this storm.»
Nevertheless, ridging prevailed over the West Coast this month, keeping temperatures
warmer than normal over the Southwest and driving moisture into the Rocky Mountain region.
In those cases, the cold is pulled down over GB and usually much of N. Europe right from the Arctic, while the Arctic itself can often be
warmer than normal as descending air and high pressure dominate.
I keep hearing how the Arctic is
warmer than normal, and so it's a sure sign of «global warming».
17 November 2016... The Washington Post (Quoted): The North Pole is an insane 36 degrees
warmer than normal as winter descends
«On Svalbard it was more than 12 °C
warmer than normal in January and again in April 2006, and more than 5 °C on the annual average.»
National Weather Service climate expert Rick Thoman says there's a good chance that all of Alaska will be
warmer than normal in August and the next couple of months.
Africa experienced
warmer than normal conditions in every year of the decade.
But the forecast also indicates temperatures will be
warmer than normal, which could mean most of that precipitation falls as rain, not snow.
The only reason some places get
warmer than normal is because; other places get colder than normal — shrink and make space to accommodate the extra volume of air, from where is warmer — otherwise, if the WHOLE atmosphere gets warmer - > earth's radiator increases in volume and equalizes in a jiffy.
If the water gets a little
warmer than normal the amount of insulting ice cover decreases and the extra warmth is released to space faster.