Search results (3,755)

Page 22 of 375

Web results

Met Office daily weather: Changeable conditions for the start of the week

and drizzle will spread eastwards, becoming locally heavy over western hills. Some eastern areas, particularly those sheltered by high ground, may remain dry. Winds will remain fresh to strong along coasts and over hills. Temperatures will stay near average in northern Scotland and rather warm elsewhere

Met Office daily weather: A wet and windy start to the week

Monday begins with a mix of sunny spells and showers, particularly frequent in areas exposed to a north or north-westerly flow. Over the northern Scottish mountains, these showers will fall as snow, though conditions are expected to ease as the day progresses. Later in the afternoon, cloud

News

Wet and windy weather for some

in exposed locations, including roads and bridges in north Wales, as well as roads passing over high ground in northern England and southern Scotland. ⚠️ Yellow weather warning issued ⚠️ Wind across north Wales, northern England and southern Scotland Thursday 0100 – 0900 Latest info 👉 https://t.co

Microsoft Word - 2025_02_storm_eowyn.docx

Storm Éowyn, 24 January 2025 Storm Éowyn, the fifth storm of the 2024/2025 season so far, hit the UK in late January. Northern Ireland and Scotland’s Central Belt experienced the brunt of this storm with winds gusting widely at well over 70Kt (81mph), and in places over 80Kt (92mph). The highest

arrcc_carissa_ws4_observational_datasets-v2.pdf

the key drivers of precipitation extremes over Nepal, Section 2 reviews a selection of common precipitation datasets and Section 3 compares of subset of 5 datasets from Section 2 with the Met Office seasonal forecast GloSea5. We conclude with some directions for future work in Section 4. 1.1 Drivers

NCIC Monthly Summary

was near average in some western areas, but well above average further east, with over 200% of normal for London and the south-east and also parts of Aberdeenshire and Moray. Sunshine was particularly low for much of England and Wales, with only the south of Northern Ireland and the Isle of Man

Arctic and Antarctic end of season report - October 2019

reanalysis suggesting that upper air temperatures were the warmest on record. The summer saw frequent strong occurrences of the Arctic Dipole Anomaly, a pattern characterised by high pressure over Greenland and the North American Arctic, which has been historically associated with above average sea

Heather_Rumbold_ppt.pptx

Office Motivation Cutting edge science rapidly evolving through community contribution JULES Global Model Need to benchmark both parts of this system Science evolves over much longer timescales Surface fluxes • Standalone JULES configurations are evaluated and benchmarked by observations. • This allows

hot-spell---august-2003---met-office.pdf

) on 30 June 1976, and at Shaw's Bridge, Belfast (Co. Antrim) on 12 July 1983. Hot spells, with consecutive maximum temperatures over 30 °C During the long hot summer of 1976, temperatures exceeded 32 °C (90 °F), somewhere in the UK, on 15 consecutive days starting on 23 June. In 2003, 32 °C

reinhard-k.-h.-schiemann-grenville-lister-rosalyn-hatcher-dan-hodson-bryan-lawrence-len-shaffrey-andrea-dittus-jon-robson-ben-harvey-kevin-hodges-oscar-martinez-alvarado-steve-woolnough-andrew-turner.pdf

range. The SSWs are identified based on the methodology of Charlton and Polvani (2007). In total, 49 SSWs in ERA5 (1959-2023) while 2329 SSWs in LE. b) and c) Composite evolution of SSW signal in the NAM for the 60 days before and after the SSW starting date (lag = 0) and over the height range of 1

Page navigation