释义 |
Definition of midlatitudes in US English: midlatitudesplural nounˈmidˌladəˌt(y)o͞odz Areas lying between 35 and 55 (or more broadly, between 30 and 60) degrees north or south of the equator. mesoscaleconvective systems in the tropics and midlatitudes Example sentencesExamples - Anthropogenic depletion of the stratospheric ozone layer at the polar zone and also at earth midlatitudes is leading to considerable increment in UV-B radiation on the earth's surface.
- Equator-to-pole gradients were uneven, however, with a broader tropical region that peaked in extent in the late Early Cretaceous and, reflecting modern climate trends, the greatest decrease in temperature occurs at midlatitudes.
- In the past, atmospheric observations at midlatitudes were insufficient for creating the single-column and cloud-resolving models.
- Thus the clear sky value at sea level in the tropics would normally be in the range 10-12 and 10 is an exceptionally high value for northern midlatitudes.
- But the gullies typically are found at midlatitudes, where temperatures are so cold that the presence of liquid water is unlikely.
- It is clear that endothermy need not be evoked in order to explain apparently stable temperatures in medium-sized dinosaurs living at midlatitudes.
- The weather systems responsible for transporting heat and moisture towards Antarctica have their origins in the midlatitudes of the Southern Hemisphere or in the circumpolar trough of low pressure.
- But at midlatitudes, dense clouds are relatively rare above 7 km.
- Viewed from the northern midlatitudes, Venus rises within a half hour of 4 A.M. local time throughout the winter and spring - nearly two hours before dawn's first light in January.
- Similar to the May 29 event, aurora were observed at midlatitudes - in both Europe and the United States.
Derivatives adjective Moreover, subartic, midlatitude and tropical atmospheric profiles were included in the database code. Example sentencesExamples - This change resulted, in turn, in the northward displacement of midlatitude cyclones over Argentina, southern Africa, southern Australia, and Tasmania.
- Insurance claims in Perth reached $38 million, an extraordinary toll for a midlatitude storm.
- In contrast to the midlatitude case, tropical glaciers do not have summertime melt seasons characterized by above-freezing air temperature.
- But in the Southern Hemisphere, a midlatitude location was unexpected.
Definition of midlatitudes in US English: midlatitudesplural nounˈmidˌladəˌt(y)o͞odz Areas lying between 35 and 55 (or more broadly, between 30 and 60) degrees north or south of the equator. mesoscaleconvective systems in the tropics and midlatitudes Example sentencesExamples - In the past, atmospheric observations at midlatitudes were insufficient for creating the single-column and cloud-resolving models.
- Similar to the May 29 event, aurora were observed at midlatitudes - in both Europe and the United States.
- Thus the clear sky value at sea level in the tropics would normally be in the range 10-12 and 10 is an exceptionally high value for northern midlatitudes.
- But the gullies typically are found at midlatitudes, where temperatures are so cold that the presence of liquid water is unlikely.
- Viewed from the northern midlatitudes, Venus rises within a half hour of 4 A.M. local time throughout the winter and spring - nearly two hours before dawn's first light in January.
- Anthropogenic depletion of the stratospheric ozone layer at the polar zone and also at earth midlatitudes is leading to considerable increment in UV-B radiation on the earth's surface.
- Equator-to-pole gradients were uneven, however, with a broader tropical region that peaked in extent in the late Early Cretaceous and, reflecting modern climate trends, the greatest decrease in temperature occurs at midlatitudes.
- It is clear that endothermy need not be evoked in order to explain apparently stable temperatures in medium-sized dinosaurs living at midlatitudes.
- But at midlatitudes, dense clouds are relatively rare above 7 km.
- The weather systems responsible for transporting heat and moisture towards Antarctica have their origins in the midlatitudes of the Southern Hemisphere or in the circumpolar trough of low pressure.
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