Search results (1,390)

Page 82 of 139

Web results

march-2025-data-satellite-brochure.pdf

10 minutes Polar Stereographic -100E, 0N -144E, 46N / -74E, 16N 1200x759 Water vapour 6.185 Single Channel (wl/ µm) PNG Dust RGB JPEG Natural colour RGB JPEG Met Office FitzRoy Road, Exeter Devon, EX1 3PB United Kingdom Tel: +44 (0)1392 885680 Fax: +44 (0)1392 885681 [email protected]

The Future is Small

) mm Measurement Characteristic Value Unit Angular Coverage /Resolution 45 x 360; 5x11 deg Energy Coverage/Resolution 20-5,000, 13% eV Cadence ~1 min L5 Consortium Meeting, London 11th - 14th May, 2015 Hot Plasma Environment Monitor (HOPE-M) Key requirements • Telecoms satellites at GEO • Surface

Met Office festival forecast: More heat on the way for this week's festivals

throughout the week, with temperatures climbing to very warm or even hot levels by the weekend. Further north, TRNSMT Festival at Glasgow Green will see more varied conditions. Cloudier skies and some rain are expected on Wednesday and Thursday, particularly in western Argyll. However, from Thursday onwards

metoffice_extremeweather_secondary_final.pdf

is an uncontrolled fire in a natural area. It can be caused by a combination of very hot and dry weather, with fires being started either through lightning strikes or human activity. Find out more: www.kfwf.org.uk www.nationalgeographic.com/ environment/natural-disasters/ wildfires/ Find out more

met-office-extreme-weather-briefing-note.pdf

and water supplies, is now 20 times more likely to occur in the present day compared to in a world without human greenhouse gas emissions. Looking forward, it is virtually certain that, in most places, there will be more hot temperature extremes as global mean temperatures increase. • Heavy rainfall

metoffice_extremeweather_secondary_0519-amended-aug21.pdf

is an uncontrolled fire in a natural area. It can be caused by a combination of very hot and dry weather, with fires being started either through lightning strikes or human activity. Find out more: www.kfwf.org.uk www.nationalgeographic.com/ environment/natural-disasters/ wildfires/ Find out more

western_europe_attribution_june_2022.pdf

experiment suggest an increase in temperature since the late 20th century that continues throughout the 21st century, expected to steadily increase the likelihood of extremely hot events. Such long-term warming is not seen in the NAT climate, suggesting it is of anthropogenic origin. Figure 1. Timeseries

exceptional-warmth-september-2016---met-office.pdf

, with the humidity leading to thunderstorms bringing intense downpours and causing flash-flooding. Several locations recorded hourly totals exceeding 30mm. Impacts While many in eastern England enjoyed unseasonably hot weather on the UK's beaches, elsewhere flash flooding resulted in significant weather

indian_heatwave_2022.pdf

an increase in temperature since the late 20th century that continues throughout the 21st century, expected to steadily increase the likelihood of extremely hot events. Such long-term warming is not seen in the NAT climate, suggesting it is of anthropogenic origin. Figure 1. Timeseries of the April-May

Page navigation