meteorology$48395$ - significado y definición. Qué es meteorology$48395$
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Qué (quién) es meteorology$48395$ - definición

TERM IN METEOROLOGY
Atmospheric corona; Corona (meteorology); Corona meteorology
  • A solar corona up [[Beinn Mhòr (South Uist)]]
  • Lunar corona

Boundary-Layer Meteorology         
JOURNAL
Bound-Layer Meteorol; Bound.-Layer Meteorol.; Boundary Layer Meteorology
Boundary-Layer Meteorology is a monthly peer-reviewed scientific journal published by Springer Science+Business Media. It was established in 1970 by R.
Meteorological         
  • Parhelion (sundog)]] in [[Savoie]]
  • Forecast of surface pressures five days into the future for the north Pacific, North America, and north Atlantic Ocean
  • General circulation of the Earth's atmosphere: The westerlies and trade winds are part of the Earth's atmospheric circulation.
  • thumb
  • Satellite image of [[Hurricane Hugo]] with a [[polar low]] visible at the top of the image
  • A meteorologist at the console of the IBM 7090 in the Joint Numerical Weather Prediction Unit. c. 1965
  • [[NOAA]]: Synoptic scale weather analysis.
  • Annual mean sea surface temperatures.
  • A hemispherical cup anemometer
  • Cloud classification by altitude of occurrence
BRANCH OF SCIENCE DEALING WITH THE SHORT-TERM VARIATIONS OF ATMOSPHERIC CONDITIONS INCLUDING WIND, PRECIPITATION, TEMPERATURE, HUMIDITY, CLOUD COVER, AND AIR PRESSURE
Meteorological; Weatherologist; Atmospheric dynamics; Meterologist; Meterology; Metereology; Slight Risk Of Severe Thunderstorms; Meterological; Meteorology/Books; Nuclear meteorology; Broadcast meteorologist; Hurricane specialist; Agricultural meteorology; Weather research; Maritime meteorology; History of meteorology; Aviation meteorology; Meterological briefing
·adj Of or pertaining to the atmosphere and its phenomena, or to meteorology.
meterologist         
  • Parhelion (sundog)]] in [[Savoie]]
  • Forecast of surface pressures five days into the future for the north Pacific, North America, and north Atlantic Ocean
  • General circulation of the Earth's atmosphere: The westerlies and trade winds are part of the Earth's atmospheric circulation.
  • thumb
  • Satellite image of [[Hurricane Hugo]] with a [[polar low]] visible at the top of the image
  • A meteorologist at the console of the IBM 7090 in the Joint Numerical Weather Prediction Unit. c. 1965
  • [[NOAA]]: Synoptic scale weather analysis.
  • Annual mean sea surface temperatures.
  • A hemispherical cup anemometer
  • Cloud classification by altitude of occurrence
BRANCH OF SCIENCE DEALING WITH THE SHORT-TERM VARIATIONS OF ATMOSPHERIC CONDITIONS INCLUDING WIND, PRECIPITATION, TEMPERATURE, HUMIDITY, CLOUD COVER, AND AIR PRESSURE
Meteorological; Weatherologist; Atmospheric dynamics; Meterologist; Meterology; Metereology; Slight Risk Of Severe Thunderstorms; Meterological; Meteorology/Books; Nuclear meteorology; Broadcast meteorologist; Hurricane specialist; Agricultural meteorology; Weather research; Maritime meteorology; History of meteorology; Aviation meteorology; Meterological briefing
A person who can't help watching the meter tick over in the taxi in which he is travelling.
The more John travelled in a taxi the more his eyes were glued to the meter. He had become a real meterologist

Wikipedia

Corona (optical phenomenon)

In meteorology, a corona (plural coronae) is an optical phenomenon produced by the diffraction of sunlight or moonlight (or, occasionally, bright starlight or planetlight) by individual small water droplets and sometimes tiny ice crystals of a cloud or on a foggy glass surface. In its full form, a corona consists of several concentric, pastel-colored rings around the celestial object and a central bright area called aureole. The aureole is often (especially in case of the Moon) the only visible part of the corona and has the appearance of a bluish-white disk which fades to reddish-brown towards the edge. The angular diameter of a corona depends on the sizes of the water droplets involved; smaller droplets produce larger coronae. For the same reason, the corona is the most pronounced when the size of the droplets is most uniform. Coronae differ from halos in that the latter are formed by refraction (rather than diffraction) from comparatively large rather than small ice crystals. The diffraction pattern is called an Airy disk.