This mission consists of up to 100 waypoints, guiding the aircraft home using altitude and airspeed settings at each waypoint. |
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There are also azonal saline wetlands, wetlands, gypsum and limestone containing soil types in low altitude zones. |
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A scale along the staff showed the altitude, or angle above the horizon, of the body. |
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Like other nautical instruments its primary function was to measure the altitude of the sun or a star above the horizon. |
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Also, on any given day the Sun circles the sky at the same apparent altitude. |
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Let y be the altitude of the triangular cross section of the wedge in Figure 6a cut by a plane at distance x from the base. |
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I led a trip in the Everest National Park and two people collapsed from altitude sickness. |
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In 1952 on a house boat in Kashmir, I had another throat infection and, I think, altitude sickness. |
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Many trekkers arriving in Nepal will have established views on drug treatments for altitude sickness. |
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We didn't know it at the time but two people died of altitude sickness on that mountain the week before. |
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Indeed Spanish Jesuit fathers in South America were the first in Western literature to document the symptoms of altitude sickness. |
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The chewing of the leaf helps with the symptoms of altitude sickness, wards off hunger, and provides mild stimulant effects. |
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The bad news was that a trekker from another party had been struck down with a combination of altitude sickness and pneumonia. |
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Great care is taken to acclimatise trekkers to increasing altitudes to avoid problems with altitude sickness. |
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He finally had to feign illness due to altitude sickness and return to Beijing to be re-assigned to another post. |
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It's been shown that if you keep returning to high altitudes, the effect of altitude sickness slowly reduces brain tissue volume. |
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Whether it was the beginnings of altitude sickness, hypothermia, or simply fatigue I have no idea. |
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Exhausted, he develops altitude sickness and, because neither brother has a rope, cannot descend by the same steep route. |
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You have to climb very slowly to avoid altitude sickness, which is your biggest danger. |
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Trading speed for altitude, Art got the racer up to about 50 feet and managed to make a safe landing at the airfield. |
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Air travel uses large amounts of fossil fuel, which are then turned to greenhouse gases, released at high altitude. |
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The initial design of the ballonet size will determine an individual airship's maximum change of altitude capability. |
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Today, Sherpas go well beyond their traditional duties of setting fixed lines at altitude and shuttling gear up unimaginable terrain. |
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There were signs of avalanching in every direction and at almost every altitude. |
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And we've got to wonder, if you're able to talk a mile a minute on the ground, how do you calculate the speed of speech at cruising altitude? |
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Lazily drifting at a high altitude, you wait until the sap investing his paycheck in the drunk blonde shuffles off to the restroom. |
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The additional altitude would give us a bit of insurance against a possible explosive mid-air meeting with one of our friends. |
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After reaching the usual 8000-ft cruising altitude, the engines were throttled back to create a moderate cabin noise level. |
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The normal altitude is about 100 km while the summer mesopause is situated around 87 km for about 4 month. |
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I was working to stay plus or minus 300 feet from the assigned altitude because of the up-and-down drafts. |
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He wanted to know his elevation above sea level, and he planned soon to measure the true altitude of the Rocky Mountains. |
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On most aircraft you use your CAS to determine TAS up to a certain altitude, then use the Machmeter beyond that altitude. |
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Unfortunately, on its first test flight, it flew only 500 yards at an altitude of 100 feet before crashing. |
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A nautical instrument used to measure the altitude of stars and planets in the sky in order to determine a ship's exact direction. |
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On the way down it will take images that will help determine its exact location and altitude, and set the timing for the final thruster firings. |
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The beams would guide a pilot to the airstrip, but in conditions of zero visibility, they did not provide altitude. |
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I have also carried out IGC-standard barograph calibrations including for the then UK gain-of-height and absolute altitude records. |
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With respect to orbit altitude, four of six planned ascent burns have been completed. |
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She has trained at Flagstaff in Arizona, again using the thin air at high altitude to stretch her limbs and clear her mind. |
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The airline captain records a fuel burn of 9 gph per engine on his Geronimo, seemingly irrespective of altitude. |
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My guess is that this object was at a very high altitude, because even using a zoom lens it was hard to make the shape out. |
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He once pushed the 1997 Lions through 100 lung-busting scrums at altitude in preparation for a Test match. |
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In addition, compensation for wind drift based on visual cues on the ground becomes more difficult with increasing altitude. |
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The rocket plane made its maiden launch in June from a specially made jet, named White Knight, at an altitude of 15 km. |
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Maybe the low altitude intimidates the pilot and the bigger bank angle seems threatening. |
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Physical Rwanda occupies a mountainous region where the equatorial climate is modified by the altitude. |
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At the moorland region, you find the giant groundsels and lobelias common in the high altitude mountain regions of eastern Africa. |
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They spent this week living it up in Cape Town instead of acclimatising to altitude. |
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If I was going to climb to altitude in a plane with a wing about to come off, I certainly wanted my parachute leg straps fastened! |
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Consider, first, a fairly crude altimeter, a device used for measuring altitude or height above sea level. |
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The land rises gradually to the north and does not reach an altitude of more than 3,000 feet. |
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This makes it possible for light pollution in different areas to be compared without the confusion of altitude effects. |
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I don't remember whether the bombs were dropped before we fell out of formation or sometime after we were down at low altitude. |
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In 1730 he invented a quadrant which measured the altitude of the Sun or of a star. |
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You need to be fit because anything you do at that altitude is three times more difficult than normal. |
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Although troops need to be acclimatized for any kind of mountainous terrain, the duration depends on the altitude at which the unit must operate. |
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The altitude at which all air has been removed from the ballonet is referred to as the pressure altitude. |
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Steep climbs and high altitude mark the Machame Route, a little traveled but highly scenic trail to the top of Kilimanjaro. |
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At intervals, the ATV will also use its thrusters to boost the Station's altitude. |
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From the ground, a large weather balloon at an altitude of 30 kilometers appears as a star. |
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As Hammann made a wide circle to gain altitude and get his bearings, he sighted enemy patrol boats racing toward Ludlow's foundering Macchi. |
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Partial pressure in oxygen was adjusted for altitude and reported as if it were obtained at sea level. |
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Light can be blinding on the high altitude salt flats, or dense and green in the rainforest. |
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The combination of altitude, moisture, sunlight, and rich volcanic soils make the perfect environment for the best quality leatherleaf. |
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The transmission system is rated at 900 hp for improved high temperature and high altitude performance. |
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Overhead a keen, high altitude wind hauls thin streaks of cirrus across the bright, clear blue sky. |
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When Dickinson glanced rearward he saw a Japanese plane on fire and losing altitude and speed. |
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Once the airplane reaches a high enough altitude, the water freezes, affecting the operation of an aileron control bearing. |
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Can they move it up and down in altitude to catch winds blowing in different directions? |
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The most familiar cause of hypoxic hypoxia is the low oxygen content of air at high altitude. |
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The only thing to hope for was our emergency oxygen supply would hold out long enough for us to get to a lower altitude. |
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Choosing the altitude for an airdrop equally depends on the tactical situation and the parachutists' skills. |
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When my displays were restored, the aircraft maintained airspeed and altitude. |
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Thermals save a flyer from having to use precious stamina on wingstrokes to gain altitude. |
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I can't take much more altitude lost as I'm down to 2,600 ' not far above the treed hillside. |
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The extra weight, altitude, and soft snow will all contribute to sending your heart rate into the red zone. |
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He began to level off at 5,500 ft, directed the copilot to declare an emergency and obtain an altitude block of airspace. |
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A year earlier, she had set an altitude record in the same craft which was a small Avro Avian biplane. |
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Low altitude dry vegetation is found relatively close to the littoral zone where the habitat is characterised by strong droughts. |
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And it seems admirers have a treat in store this year on Girraween's alpine style heathlands, meadows and high altitude forests. |
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While the altitude axis of an altazimuth mount may bend, the bending is constant and can be compensated by realignment of the tube or optics. |
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This century's leap into aviation and space travel has brought with it a much deeper understanding of the human ability to function at altitude. |
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The Superfort, its mission apparently completed, descended from altitude and the pilot decided to do a bit of joy riding. |
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If cabin depressurization occurs at altitude and goes above this value, passengers in shirt sleeves will die shortly. |
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The material soaks up water that freezes at altitude and can cause delamination that may not be readily visible. |
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Spacecraft orbiting Earth can be found in several different types of orbits based on their altitude and orientation. |
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Whatever happened overtook them both within a minute or so of that altitude change request, and they were never heard from again. |
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And now that you mention it, I also got seasick, and had altitude sickness, and had to be rescued a few times. |
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Trekking at altitude is no easy feat, and each woman pushed herself harder than she thought possible. |
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If the object is below the horizon then the altitude is negative. |
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The dizzying altitude, schizophrenic temperatures, lack of rainfall, and coarse terrain make it one of the most grim of all the places that humans call home. |
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But if you were to use the world's most accurate atomic clocks, you would also need to take the latitude and altitude of the two locations into account. |
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Despite the lung-busting altitude, the unrelenting, cobbled trails and the punishing gradients, each year more people arrive to test their mettle. |
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When Cassini had its first encounter with Enceladus on 17 February at an altitude of 1167 kilometres, the magnetometer saw a striking signature in the magnetic field. |
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Whether or not he gets back in one piece depends very much on a successful take-off and ascent to a relatively calm cruising altitude of up to 45,000 ft. |
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Of course strong wind shear at high altitude can cause problems. |
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This is a good deal like having a theory that tells us that the area of a plane figure is one-half the base times the altitude, without telling us for what figures this holds. |
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They will be at risk of many other illnesses besides altitude sickness. |
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The higher you go, the higher the risk of developing altitude sickness, or much more dangerous, pulmonary or cerebral edema, excess water in the lung or brain. |
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And like narcosis in deep-diving, there is the ever-present spectre of altitude sickness that affects the climber's ability to correctly assess the environment around him. |
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Yet he is fast becoming one of the most sought-after acts in America, wowing the crowds as he plummets through the air from an altitude of 5,000 ft. |
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The mountain climbers spent a few days acclimatizing themselves to the high altitude. |
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Helium sustains the Air Rotor which ascends to an altitude for best winds. |
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Likewise, mark any structures or elevations that will rise within 2000 feet of your plane's altitude and are located within three miles on either side of your proposed route. |
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Specifically, the pilots got themselves into a high altitude stall, where the wings lose the capacity to provide lift. |
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When declared operational in 1964, Transit consisted of five satellites in offset polar orbits circling the Earth at an altitude of about 670 miles. |
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Gale predicted and demonstrated a potential increase of transpiration with altitude when there is less than the average lapse rate of ambient temperature. |
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Clarke chose an orbital altitude of 35,786 kilometers because at that distance the angular velocity of Earth's rotation would match that of the satellite. |
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Those who prefer altitude can climb the lodge's seven-story, 115-foot canopy tower and stop at each level to observe tanagers, jacamars, guans, and oropendulas in action. |
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If it's not possible to train at altitude at least two weeks prior to your trip or event, finding a way to sleep at altitude will also speed acclimatization. |
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Gliding is a sport that is not easily televisable, short of putting the camera in a very high altitude plane, to get a view with something to provide context. |
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The coca leaf, considered sacred in Quechua culture, has many healing properties, one of them being the reduction of nausea and headache from altitude sickness. |
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Air is squeezed out of the ballonets as the gas expands with increasing altitude and forced back in again as the helium contracts when the airship descends. |
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At a height of 60 kilometres, it will be able to detect its own altitude using a pair of radar altimeters, which will be able to measure the exact distance to the surface. |
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Air at very high altitude smells completely different to lower altitudes. |
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The poor desert soil, the high altitude and low rainfall provided an unlikely haven for the young vines. |
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He was left weakened, dehydrated and in pain by altitude sickness and exhaustion. |
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We added three sets of broadband solar radiometers mounted on an aircraft, which was flown over the site and above stratiform clouds at an altitude of 7 km. |
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Both nations have struggled in recent years while playing at altitude, where the thin air hands an advantage to those acclimatised to the conditions. |
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Kelly wants to develop the Astroliner, a winged rocket towed into the air by a 747 jet and released at altitude to soar on a suborbital trajectory under its own power. |
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He spends long periods of time training at altitude in his home country. |
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The big taimen I was after were in the bigger rivers at lower altitude. |
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I also try to keep the waypoints on both devices in sync and always include altitude that I copy from either the topo discs or the online airport directory. |
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These skills are particularly needed when, as in the case of the AirAsia flight, the airplane is at cruise altitude. |
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He or she points out that the shuttle would be less exposed to micrometeoroids and orbital debris at the altitude of Hubble than at the lower altitude of the space station. |
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If the GPS also records altitude then no need for the barogram. |
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The fun was over, and I slowed and banked up to a safer altitude. |
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I'll be climbing steadily upwards for six to eight hours a day, coping with dangerous altitude sickness, blisters and biting cold. |
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Some visitors find it difficult to adjust to the city's high altitude. |
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In this case, Asian dust was transported by a downward moving low pressure and the altitude of Asian dust was below 3km. |
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Maybe the altitude is messing up his head and he figures I don't remember what a cockbreath he was on the music store. |
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Heavy snowfall is not common in the lowlands, but becomes more common with altitude. |
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About three quarters of that rough octagon is the Meseta Central, a vast plateau ranging from 610 to 760 m in altitude. |
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Some early jet aircraft needed rocket assistance to take off from high altitude airfields or when the day temperature was high. |
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The SEPR 841 booster engine was used on the Dassault Mirage for high altitude interception. |
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By 1940 they had conducted 25 successful launchings of A5 rockets, which reached 10 miles altitude and had a range of 12 miles. |
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The Dark Peak tends to receive more rainfall each year in comparison to the White Peak as it is higher in altitude. |
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To the north of the summit are a number of high altitude gills which flow into Lingmell Beck. |
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The F136 team stated their engine had a greater temperature margin, potentially critical for VTOL operations in hot, high altitude conditions. |
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In this fashion the jets are able to operate to a much higher altitude than would normally be possible. |
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Other local factors, such as altitude and climate, can also significantly affect play. |
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The climate varies greatly over small distances, due to the altitude, ocean currents, topography, and winds. |
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Knowing Greenwich time and comparing against local time from a common altitude sight, the navigator can work out his longitude. |
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On a sighting, other patrols at lower altitude would fly up to join the battle. |
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Another problem was that he was very farsighted wearing thick glasses under his goggles, which would mist up at altitude. |
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The amount of snowfall varies with altitude and enormously from year to year. |
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Both sides refused to fight at the other's best altitude, until two Mirages finally descended to engage. |
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The fuzes were functioning correctly, and the bombs were simply released from too low an altitude. |
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The EVS imagery is displayed on the HUD for low altitude flying, demonstrating its value for flying tactical missions at night or in clouds. |
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It is also extremely dry at cruising altitude, and this causes sore eyes, dry skin and mucosa on long flights. |
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With the suggestion of the RDO, I descended to pattern altitude and completed my four required touch-and-goes. |
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This region is as extensive as the Amazon basin but has a very different climate as it lies farther south at a higher altitude. |
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Alpine tundra does not contain trees because the climate and soils at high altitude block tree growth. |
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As is typical with most other missiles, range at lower altitude may be as little as one third that of high altitude. |
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On the trip up Mt. Ranier, two of the kids got nosebleeds from the dry air and altitude. |
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Convection comes to equilibrium when a parcel at air at a given altitude has the same density as its surroundings. |
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As the altitude increases, the main form of precipitation becomes snow and the winds increase. |
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Gender frequencies change with altitude, the frequency of female flowers increasing with higher elevation. |
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The low altitude of the city, and moderating influences of the harbour, mean that lying snow very rarely occurs in the city itself. |
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Seabirds fly low over water but gain altitude when crossing land, and the reverse pattern is seen in landbirds. |
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Contours are one of several common methods used to denote elevation or altitude and depth on maps. |
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All three of the northern locations are at low altitude and fairly close to the Baltic Sea. |
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Aviation charts are divided into boxes and the maximum terrain altitude from MSL in each box is clearly indicated. |
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Then, by extrapolating current range and altitude difference to anticipated future values, it determines if a potential collision threat exists. |
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The size of the protected volume depends on the altitude, speed, and heading of the aircraft involved in the encounter. |
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Some pilots have been unsure how to act when their aircraft was requested to climb whilst flying at their maximum altitude. |
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The rule refers to operation at both the target altitude and speed, but some receivers stop operating even when stationary. |
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It would be essential therefore to have good control of altitude while still able to stay up for a long time. |
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The lower one held hot air and could be quickly heated or cooled to provide the varying lift for good altitude control. |
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Factors such as the type of soil, vegetation present, and altitude have no effect on the areas that moles choose to inhabit. |
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These snakes can perform a controlled glide for hundreds of feet depending upon launch altitude and can even turn in midair. |
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At high altitude, during winter, and in the far north and south, snow collects in ice caps, snow pack and glaciers. |
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The boiling and freezing points of water are affected by solutes, as well as air pressure, which is in turn is affected by altitude. |
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Lines of constant tidal phase are called cotidal lines, which are analogous to contour lines of constant altitude on topographical maps. |
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Total atmospheric pressure decreases as altitude increases, causing a lower partial pressure of oxygen which is defined as hypobaric hypoxia. |
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Atmospheric hypoxia is also the basis of altitude training which is a standard part of training for elite athletes. |
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These procedures use aircraft position reports, time, altitude, distance, and speed to ensure separation. |
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Therefore, if a collective input is made, all the blades change equally, and the result is the helicopter increasing or decreasing in altitude. |
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Displacing the cyclic forward will cause the nose to pitch down, with a resultant increase in airspeed and loss of altitude. |
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This is typically from April until October or November, although this varies considerably with latitude and altitude. |
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Local factors such as aspect, altitude, proximity to the sea also complicate the matter. |
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The climate of a location is affected by its latitude, terrain, and altitude, as well as nearby water bodies and their currents. |
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The snow melt from the mountains feeds the rivers, and natural changes in altitude form sudden drops in elevation and give rise to waterfalls. |
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The drones continue to have altitude problems in the Andes, leading to plans to make a drone blimp, employing open source software. |
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The composition of olive oil varies with the cultivar, altitude, time of harvest and extraction process. |
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The composition varies by cultivar, region, altitude, time of harvest, and extraction process. |
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In order to avoid staring into the sun to measure its altitude, navigators could hold the instrument in front of them with the sun to their side. |
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Care would have to be taken to ensure that the altitude of the centre of the sun was determined. |
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In order to perform measurements of the altitude of the sun, a back observation quadrant was developed. |
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Large frame quadrants were used for astronomical measurements, notably determining the altitude of celestial objects. |
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As is usual for tropical islands, variations of temperature are much less marked than rainfall variations, and depend only on altitude. |
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While the Conquistadors may have been slightly taller, the Inca had the advantage of coping with the extraordinary altitude. |
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The climate in the Andes varies greatly depending on latitude, altitude, and proximity to the sea. |
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Mountain climate is one of the unique features of the Andes and other high altitude reliefs where climate is determined by elevation. |
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In the mountain region, rain is frequent in summer, and temperature and humidity diminish with altitude up to the frozen peaks of the Andes. |
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In the narrow center, the weather changes to be more humid due to altitude. |
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The change of altitude towards the Sierra de Baja California creates an alpine climate in this region. |
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The altitude of this area varies from 1,800 to peaks over 2,900 meters such as the La Giganta and La Sierra del Cubo mountains. |
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The state has an average altitude of 2230 meters above sea level, with the capital at 2,496 masl. |
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At such a high altitude, pneumonia was always a concern and mercury poisoning took the lives of many involved in the refining process. |
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Because of its altitude, Lesotho remains cooler throughout the year than other regions at the same latitude. |
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Along the eastern border with Mozambique is the Lubombo, a mountain ridge, at an altitude of around 600 metres. |
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The western border of Swaziland, with an average altitude of 1200 metres, lies on the edge of an escarpment. |
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Variations in temperature are also related to the altitude of the different regions. |
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The country's rainy season generally runs from late October to March and the hot climate is moderated by increasing altitude. |
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Norrland has a highly variable climate depending on altitude, latitude and distance to water. |
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In the 18th century four Chamonix men almost made the summit of Mont Blanc but were overcome by altitude sickness and snowblindness. |
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Instead there are two walking routes, but they entail some loss of altitude. |
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The altitude and rough terrain of the archaeological sites have protected them from types of damage caused by human settlement in lowland areas. |
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However, altitude is not the sole determinant of whether a river is upland or lowland. |
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Rivers with a course that drops in altitude very slowly will have slower water flow and lower force. |
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Princetown, like the rest of Dartmoor, experiences colder and wetter weather than most of Devon, especially because of its high altitude. |
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It has three sensors which track steps, acceleration, and altitude. |
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Away I roared once more, resolved to score a three-pointer. I glided down to a good start but estimated my altitude wrongly. |
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All of this is consistent with a violent explosion at altitude. |
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Previously, highlands were special areas visited only by trained personnel and alpinists who understood the risks associated with high altitude. |
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The effect of rhodiola and acetazolamide on the sleep architecture and blood oxygen saturation in men living at high altitude. |
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Second, Acetazolamide has been demonstrated in well-designed clinical trials to reduce the symptoms of altitude sickness. |
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A DOCTOR'S daughter has died from suspected altitude sickness while trekking in Peru on a gap year after university. |
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Measuring 35 metres long, it can lift a 500kg payload to its 5,000-ft operating altitude, extending the radar horizon to 160-km. |
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It calculates flight parameters including altitude, air speed,static pressure, mach number, and true angle of attack. |
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The satellite which weighs 50 kg is used for telephotography, measurement and specification of different locations from a 400-meter altitude. |
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As well as the snow-sure high altitude, the resort is renowned for The Wall, an almost vertical run of mogul skiing. |
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Earth's axis is inclined at approximately 23 degrees to the Sun's celestial equator changing the altitude of the Sun during the year. |
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During its flight test, the uncrewed Orion reached an impressive altitude of 3,600 miles above Earth, hitting speeds of 20,000 miles per hour. |
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The crew expertly completed the controllability check with enough altitude to recover if the F-15E departed controlled flight. |
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The military aims to develop long-range surface-to-air missiles, called L-SAM, by 2020 to intercept missiles at an altitude of about 50 km. |
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By hitching a ride with high altitude winds, dust can be carried across the North Atlantic Ocean during the summer Atlantic hurricane season. |
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The coca leaves juice has a mild stimulant effect, and is known to ease stomach pain and help people from the lowlands cope with altitude sickness. |
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The 38-year-old was struck down by a bout of potentially fatal altitude sickness on Sunday after scaling 12,000ft of the 19,341ft peak in Tanzania, East Africa. |
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Orbital is modifying one of its Pegasus space boosters to carry the X-43A to its test speed of approximately 4,900 mph and its test altitude of 95,000 feet. |
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The trip will also examine the impact of acute mountain sickness, a debilitating condition often experienced on ascent to high altitude, on ability to stave off illness. |
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Rapid changes in altitude sometimes result in other conditions such as altitude sickness, acute mountain sickness and high-altitude pulmonary edema. |
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It is thought measuring blood flow through a particular blood vessel can help to predict who is at greater risk of developing acute mountain sickness at altitude. |
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By the way Bill, exactly what color is the sun in your world? You are so far out there I swear you're going to get a nosebleed from the altitude alone. |
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There is some doubt in the literature over the altitude of Swirl How. |
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The most common bird is the alpine chough which can be found scavenging at climber's huts or at the Jungfraujoch, a high altitude tourist destination. |
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These run from North to South and are determined by altitude. |
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In terms of altitude, sugarcane crop is found up to 1,600 metres or 5,200 feet close to the equator in countries such as Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru. |
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Patterned grounds like these become smaller and smaller with the increasing absolute altitude, because the sorting depth in the frost debris is getting smaller. |
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Haiti's climate is tropical with some variation depending on altitude. |
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The climate is tropical, with some variation depending on altitude. |
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Coordinates are then entered with an allowable resolution of 1 milliarcsecond for latitude and longitude and 1 cm for altitude, and are saved by touching the Save button. |
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Latitude was calculated by observing with quadrant or astrolabe the altitude of the sun or of charted stars above the horizon, but longitude is harder. |
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In the latter case, the angle between the reflected image in the mirror and the actual image of the object in the sky is exactly twice the required altitude. |
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In order to measure the altitude of a star, the observer would view the star through the sights and hold the quadrant so that the plane of the instrument was vertical. |
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Higher elevations are made temperate by their altitude, and the Arabian Sea coastline can receive surprisingly cool, humid breezes in summer due to cold upwelling offshore. |
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Switzerland is notable for the variety of grapes grown because of the large variations in terroirs, with their specific mixes of soil, air, altitude and light. |
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If you live or train for sports at high altitude where oxygen levels are lower, the production of Epo is stimulated and your blood contains more red cells. |
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These are a periselene altitude reduction and an inclination increase. |
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Coordinating these two inputs, down collective plus aft cyclic or up collective plus forward cyclic, will result in airspeed changes while maintaining a constant altitude. |
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Conceptual research and development projects by over a hundred entities are investigating the use of kites in harnessing high altitude wind currents to generate electricity. |
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Inland areas of low altitude experience the least amount of precipitation. |
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Terminal control is responsible for ensuring that aircraft are at an appropriate altitude when they are handed off, and that aircraft arrive at a suitable rate for landing. |
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Work in analogous situations in Marie Byrd Land, Antarctica, suggests that the ice surface altitude over the mountains might have been around 800m lower than predicted. |
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As a green energy initiative three IndianOil retail outlets have been solarised, which also includes the retail outlet situated at the highest altitude. |
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Due to the influence of the Gulf Stream snowfall is not common, though due to its high altitude it is more vulnerable to snowfall than surrounding regions. |
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The eyewall is where the greatest wind speeds are found, air rises most rapidly, clouds reach to their highest altitude, and precipitation is the heaviest. |
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The Carpathians at their highest altitude are only as high as the middle region of the Alps, with which they share a common appearance, climate, and flora. |
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The superpressure balloon maintains an altitude of constant density in the atmosphere, and can maintain flight until gas leakage gradually brings it down. |
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Although a balloon has no propulsion system, a degree of directional control is possible through making the balloon rise or sink in altitude to find favorable wind directions. |
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One potential problem with TCAS II is the possibility that a recommended avoidance maneuver might direct the flight crew to descend toward terrain below a safe altitude. |
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The medal may be awarded up to three times a year to record setters in speed, altitude and distance categories in light aircraft, and is still being awarded. |
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The increase in velocity with altitude is most dramatic near the surface and is affected by topography, surface roughness, and upwind obstacles such as trees or buildings. |
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Since the terrain elevation is also referenced to MSL, the pilot can estimate height above ground by subtracting the terrain altitude from the altimeter reading. |
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One can calculate the atmospheric pressure at a given altitude. |
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The severity of the displacement is negatively associated with decreases in flight altitude and as radial distance from the centre of the photograph increases. |
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The island is divided into three major ecological zones by altitude. |
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The lowest altitude of alpine climate varies dramatically by latitude. |
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As a result, interceptors were designed with a large missile payload and a powerful radar, sacrificing agility in favor of high speed, altitude ceiling and rate of climb. |
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Additional lights indicated incorrect altitude and direction. |
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The combination of these two components specifies the position of any location on the surface of Earth, without consideration of altitude or depth. |
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Immediately east from the coast are the Andes, cut by deep fjords in the south and by deep lakes in the north, and with varying temperatures according to the altitude. |
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With a range of 2925 statute miles and excellent short field performance, the Hawker 800XP is the ideal aircraft for Colorado's high altitude airports. |
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Released from its B-52 mother ship at an altitude of about 37,500 feet, the X-38 glided for about six minutes and then deployed a mammoth parafoil, a steerable parachute. |
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The variety is influenced by not only the altitude, but also by factors such as proximity to the sea coast and the seasonal impact of the monsoons. |
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The study site was at 714-837 m altitude, in submontane rain forest. |
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The RAF was at a disadvantage, and changed defensive tactics by introducing standing patrols of Spitfires at high altitude to monitor incoming raids. |
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Sudden infant death syndrome and residential altitude, David Katz et al. |
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In some mountainous and high altitude rail lines, steam engines remain in use because they are less affected by reduced air pressure than diesel engines. |
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After flying to the needed altitude, the rockets would then be fired. |
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Past research has found an association between altitude and suicide, even after controlling for gun ownership, rurality, age, and mental health access. |
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In 1986 the Argies trained for several weeks in Tilcara, a sleepy hamlet in the Andes near the border with Bolivia, to prepare for the high altitude in Mexico City. |
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Radiation doses are greater in the air because at cruising altitude, there is less atmosphere to shield passengers and crew from cosmic radiation. |
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The climate of the UK is generally temperate, although significant local variation occurs, particularly as a result of altitude and distance from the coast. |
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Forget about chanting, om-ing and high altitude yogic flying. |
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A MOUNTAIN climber who contracted severe altitude sickness after trying to conquer Mount Everest has been told he could be left disabled for life. |
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He suffered altitude sickness and gearbox failure and even witnessed the aftermath of a fatal crash involving French motorcyclist Thomas Bourgoin, for instance. |
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Several rescuers were suffering from altitude sickness at the 4,600-metre site, a member of the search teams told the official Xinhua news agency. |
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