Search results (2,772)

Page 43 of 278

Did you mean banbury's s s s s s s?

Web results

Microsoft Word - 2008_seasonal_forecast.doc

sea-surface temperature anomalies for August-September-October predicted from June 2008. Anomalies are expressed relative to the 1987-2001 period. Note positive anomalies are predicted in the eastern tropical Pacific (the boxed area shown is the Niño3.4 region (5˚S to 5˚N; 120˚W to 170˚W) often used

Climate Research 69:129

Bulgaria 3293 0 −3293 775 Cyprus 1233 2825 1592 −2522 Egypt 3335 413 −2922 −454 Greece 2152 1593 −559 1123 Iran 930 529 −401 691 Iraq 809 2409 1600 −1056 Israel 2004 2044 40 −2227 Italy 2500 952 −1548 502 Jordan 692 2447 1755 −743 Lebanon 1209 2632 1423 873 Libya 487 509 23 −582 S. Arabia 2403 1340

ukcp_local_report_2023.pdf

for their application. Further guidance on which UKCP product(s) to choose and how to use them in combination is available from Fung et al., (2018). Evaluation of additional time slices We have assessed the performance of the new UKCP Local Transient Projections in representing presentday temperature, precipitation

News

Storm Bronagh

are the extremes... pic.twitter.com/3U9NmiA7cQ — Met Office (@metoffice) September 19, 2018 A wind gust of 91 mph was recorded in Killowen in County Down in Northern Ireland, the strongest wind gust in September in Northern Ireland in records back to the 1970's. Quieter conditions are currently

Dr Edmund Stone

Areas of Expertise Operational Aircraft Based Observations (e.g. Mode-S ADS-B derived observations). Novel observation methods, including opportunistic observations. Novel Technology to Enhance Operational Observations. Current Activities Ed is the only Expert Scientist working on Operational

Why have there been so many storms in the UK this year?

released at the start of September each year. Since storm naming was introduced in 2015 to improve the communication of severe weather events, the furthest through the list the group has got is to Storm Katie, which impacted the UK in March 2016. 2023/24’s storm naming season is now just one name

SOAerosol_SeamlessModelling_Bristol_05062025.pptx

atmospheric dimethyl sulfide (DMS) to modeled oceanic DMS concentrations and emissions, Atmos. Chem. Phys., 23, 15181–15196, https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-23-15181-2023 *Joge, S. D., et al., (2024), Dimethyl sulfide (DMS) climatologies, fluxes, and trends – Part Classification: 2: Sea–air fluxes

ukcp_tech_note_sea_level_mar23.pdf

. ‘Time-mean sea-level projections update: Technical note’, Met Office. References Church, J. A., & White, N. J. (2011). Sea-Level Rise from the Late 19th to the Early 21st Century. Surveys in Geophysics, 32(4–5), 585–602. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10712-011-9119-1 Gregory, J. M., Griffies, S. M

ukcp18_factsheet_probabilistic_projections.pdf

recommend reading the science report on the PPCE (Murphy et al, 2020) where you can find examples of and explanations for the results that we see (section 3). www.metoffice.gov.uk Pg 4 of 5 Source: Met Office © Crown Copyright 2020 This document can be cited as: Murphy JM, Brown S and Fung F (2020). UKCP

Page navigation