haziness$34038$ - meaning and definition. What is haziness$34038$
Diclib.com
ChatGPT AI Dictionary
Enter a word or phrase in any language 👆
Language:

Translation and analysis of words by ChatGPT artificial intelligence

On this page you can get a detailed analysis of a word or phrase, produced by the best artificial intelligence technology to date:

  • how the word is used
  • frequency of use
  • it is used more often in oral or written speech
  • word translation options
  • usage examples (several phrases with translation)
  • etymology

What (who) is haziness$34038$ - definition

ATMOSPHERIC PHENOMENON IN WHICH DUST, SMOKE, AND OTHER DRY PARTICULATES OBSCURE THE CLARITY OF THE SKY
Causes of haze; Haziness; Hazy
  • Haze in [[Monterrey]], Mexico, during grassland fires
  • frameless
  • Bushfire]] haze in [[Sydney]], Australia
  • Haze causing red clouds, due to the scattering of light on smoke particles, also known as [[Rayleigh scattering]] during [[Mexico]]'s forest fire season
  • Haze as smoke pollution over the Mojave from fires in the [[Inland Empire]], June 2016, demonstrates the loss of contrast to the [[Sun]], and the landscape in general.
  • filter]].

hazy         
(hazier, haziest)
1.
Hazy weather conditions are those in which things are difficult to see, because of light mist, hot air, or dust.
The air was thin and crisp, filled with hazy sunshine and frost...
? clear
ADJ
2.
If you are hazy about ideas or details, or if they are hazy, you are uncertain or confused about them.
I'm a bit hazy about that...
I have only a hazy memory of what he was really like...
? clear
ADJ
3.
If things seem hazy, you cannot see things clearly, for example because you are feeling ill.
My vision has grown so hazy...
ADJ
haze         
n.
1.
Fog, mist.
2.
Obscurity, dimness.
hazy         
a.
Foggy, misty.

Wikipedia

Haze

Haze is traditionally an atmospheric phenomenon in which dust, smoke, and other dry particulates suspended in air obscure visibility and the clarity of the sky. The World Meteorological Organization manual of codes includes a classification of particulates causing horizontal obscuration into categories of fog, ice fog, steam fog, mist, haze, smoke, volcanic ash, dust, sand, and snow. Sources for particles that cause haze include farming (ploughing in dry weather), traffic, industry, volcanic activity and wildfires. Seen from afar (e.g. an approaching airplane) and depending on the direction of view with respect to the Sun, haze may appear brownish or bluish, while mist tends to be bluish grey instead. Whereas haze often is thought of as a phenomenon occurring in dry air, mist formation is a phenomenon in saturated, humid air. However, haze particles may act as condensation nuclei that leads to the subsequent vapor condensation and formation of mist droplets; such forms of haze are known as "wet haze".

In meteorological literature, the word haze is generally used to denote visibility-reducing aerosols of the wet type suspended in the atmosphere. Such aerosols commonly arise from complex chemical reactions that occur as sulfur dioxide gases emitted during combustion are converted into small droplets of sulfuric acid when exposed. The reactions are enhanced in the presence of sunlight, high relative humidity, and an absence of air flow (wind). A small component of wet-haze aerosols appear to be derived from compounds released by trees when burning, such as terpenes. For all these reasons, wet haze tends to be primarily a warm-season phenomenon. Large areas of haze covering many thousands of kilometers may be produced under extensive favorable conditions each summer.