953 resultados para cutting format


Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

It is commonly understood that the observed decline in precipitation in South-West Australia during the 20th century is caused by anthropogenic factors. Candidates therefore are changes to large-scale atmospheric circulations due to global warming, extensive deforestation and anthropogenic aerosol emissions - all of which are effective on different spatial and temporal scales. This contribution focusses on the role of rapidly rising aerosol emissions from anthropogenic sources in South-West Australia around 1970. An analysis of historical longterm rainfall data of the Bureau of Meteorology shows that South-West Australia as a whole experienced a gradual decline in precipitation over the 20th century. However, on smaller scales and for the particular example of the Perth catchment area, a sudden drop in precipitation around 1970 is apparent. Modelling experiments at a convection-resolving resolution of 3.3km using the Weather and Research Forecasting (WRF) model version 3.6.1 with the aerosol-aware Thompson-Eidhammer microphysics scheme are conducted for the period 1970-1974. A comparison of four runs with different prescribed aerosol emissions and without aerosol effects demonstrates that tripling the pre-1960s atmospheric CCN and IN concentrations can suppress precipitation by 2-9%, depending on the area and the season. This suggests that a combination of all three processes is required to account for the gradual decline in rainfall seen for greater South-West Australia and for the sudden drop observed in areas along the West Coast in the 1970s: changing atmospheric circulations, deforestation and anthropogenic aerosol emissions.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Northern Hemisphere sea ice from a Finite-Element Sea-Ice Ocean Model (FESOM) 4.5 km resolution simulation carried out by researchers from Alfred Wegener Institute (AWI), Germany. Concentration is shown with color; thickness is shown with shading. A global 1 degree mesh is used, with the "Arctic Ocean" locally refined to 4.5 km. South of CAA and Fram Strait the resolution is not refined in this simulation. The animation indicates that the 4.5 km model resolution helps to represent the small scale sea ice features, although much higher resolution is required to fully resolve the ice leads. The animation is created by Michael Böttinger from DKRZ (https://www.dkrz.de).

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Supported file formats: - CrossRef XML file(s) - TRiDaS (Tree Ring Data Standard, http://www.tridas.org). Example: hdl:10013/epic.42747.d001 - IMMA (International Maritime Meteorological Archive). Used by the project CLIWOC (García-Herrera et al. 2007, http://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.743343) - NOAA IOAS (International Ocean Atlas Series). Example: hdl:10013/epic.42747.d008 - SOCAT (Surface Ocean CO2 Atlas, Bakker et al. 2014, http://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.811776) - CHUAN (Comprehensive Historical Upper-Air Network, Stickler et al. 2013, http://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.821222). Example: hdl:10013/epic.42747.d003 - Thermosalinograph (TSG) data. Format developed by Gerd Rohardt. Example: hdl:10013/epic.42747.d002 - Columus GPS Data Logger V-900 format to KML or GPX. Example: hdl:10013/epic.42747.d006

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

This article analyses a number of social and cultural aspects of the blog phenomenon with the methodological aid of a complexity model, the New Techno-social Environment (hereinafter also referred to by its Spanish acronym, NET, or Nuevo Entorno Tecnosocial) together with the socio-technical approach of the two blogologist authors. Both authors are researchers interested in the new reality of the Digital Universal Network (DUN). After a review of some basic definitions, the article moves on to highlight some key characteristics of an emerging blog culture and relates them to the properties of the NET. Then, after a brief practical parenthesis for people entering the blogosphere for the first time, we present some reflections on blogs as an evolution of virtual communities and on the changes experienced by the inhabitants of the infocity emerging from within the NET. The article concludes with a somewhat disturbing question; whether among these changes there might not be a gradual transformation of the structure and form of human intelligence.