There are more efficient ways to tap into the sun's energy via biomass fuels. |
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Enjoying the sun's warmth we followed a thin channel that splinters off the billabong. |
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The gold zari fabric of the cape reflects the encompassing warmth of the sun's rays. |
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Instead, the scientists backed more way-out systems for reflecting the sun's rays back into space. |
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It gives skin a healthy radiance without exposing it to the sun's damaging ultraviolet rays. |
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When a lot of the sun's radiant energy makes it to Earth, it transmits energy to the atoms and molecules in the air and ground. |
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They dive through the sun's corona at one point, and aerobrake into orbit around Jupiter. |
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The ozone layer protects the Earth's surface from the sun's harmful ultraviolet rays. |
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The gluten also shields the helpful microbes from the sun's lethal ultraviolet rays. |
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Venetian blinds, although not as effective as draperies, can be adjusted to let in some light and air while reflecting the sun's heat. |
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To follow the sun's arc through the sky, Chris daily repositions the panels. |
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The site is also relatively long in the east-west direction, so avoiding the sun's glare at dawn and in the late afternoon. |
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Across the tiled floor they saw nothing but the laughing sun's reflection through colored glass rhombuses. |
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The diamond ring and the wedding band Nikolas placed on my finger six months ago blinds me as it catches the sun's rays. |
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The sun's light stretched across he sleepy town, causing a few roosters to crow. |
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Her skin was rosy from the sun's prolonged touch, and her short, feathery hair was limp. |
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A rust bucket cab whisked me through raucous, claustrophobic, and grungy urban streets which the noon sun's warmth and light never graced. |
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Her long brown hair majestically reflected the sun's glare, creating a golden tone to the aligned curls. |
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The clouds floated majestically overhead, reflecting the sun's colorful rays into the eyes of the earth. |
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Of course, the sun's rays were needed to make the mulberry paper taut and fully stretched. |
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These sulphur particles reflect the sun's energy, and stop the earth from reaching its usual temperatures. |
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The sun's gentle rays were thawing the winter ice. Nature was just beginning to blossom, after a period of dormancy. |
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The amount of daylight varies seasonally as the sun's predominant position in the sky changes. |
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These scatter the sun's rays, and prevent them from being focused together into a single bright point. |
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The effect can be seen in attics under ill-fitting tiled roofs, where the sun's rays are focused through chinks between the tiles. |
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When a lens is used to focus the sun's rays onto a piece of paper the distance of the paper from the lens is called the focal length. |
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Glass shapes, baubles and coloured beads all hung from the ivy, twinkling in the sun's rays. |
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The sun's shining, weather's sweet and beer o'clock approaches rapidly during this glorious four-day bank holiday week. |
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It is an asymmetrical oval slice of toroid, tilted out of the ground towards the south to catch the sun's heat. |
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These days, Grace is working to undo the damage done by the sun's harsh rays, treatments involving microdermabrasion and chemical peels. |
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She passed the handheld to Dolores, who examined the screen, shading it from the sun's glare. |
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In midwinter, the sun's elevation does not exceed 20 to 23 degrees, and the shortest day consists of about nine hours of daylight. |
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Some barley heads have split already, the beaded kernels fallen at the urging of the sun's heat. |
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A tropic point is the sun's position on the celestial sphere at the time of a solstice. |
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There was a brilliant pattern of purples and oranges blazing across the sky, with a few small clouds blazing with the sun's reflection. |
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The reason we need sunglasses in the first place is to protect our eyes from the sun's harmful ultraviolet rays. |
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Solar storms tend to occur near sunspots, cool regions on the sun's surface that appear as dark blotches. |
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He rode on, sitting the tractor as if it were a horse, and canted a parasol to deflect the cruellest and most direct of the sun's rays. |
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A small callus covered the third finger of the lady's finger, and nails oddly unkept stretched out a bit, glinting in the sun's rays. |
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Scouts were usually seen playing in the water to escape the burning sun's rays and get cooled down. |
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It is not a total sun block and is designed to filter most of the sun's harmful burning rays while still allowing tanning. |
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On the other hand, unshaded paved areas absorb and store the sun's heat, making them undesirable next to your house. |
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The outside of the solar panels or wings is covered with solar cells, which convert the sun's energy to electricity. |
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Other massive materials, such as brick and stone, also store the sun's heat and add mass to a building's interior. |
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This is because a brickie becomes acclimatised to the sun's rays, whereas an office worker is more likely to sunburn. |
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Cover your hair with a large brim hat or scarf while sitting poolside to block the sun's rays. |
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In Vedic astrology this time of year marks the end of the sun's southward movement and the beginning of its movement north. |
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Because she was protected by a red veil, Veiel concluded that it was caused by the sun's chemical rays. |
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And feel it I do, collapsing as the dream girl turns to face me, her visage hidden by the sun's golden glare. |
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Hi-tech solar panels have appeared on the top of city bus stands, catching the sun's rays and converting them into electricity. |
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The sun's rays filtered in through the open windows and the cracked windshield. |
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Then the sun's up, so you head to Brockwell Park, via the open-all-hours offy, to lie under a tree and make the most of the morning sunshine. |
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North is classically defined as the cardinal point opposite the sun's position at noon. |
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The sun's UV rays are as damaging to your skin on cloudy and hazy days as they are on sunny days. |
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The sulfurous gases spewed into the atmosphere by Tambora formed aerosol droplets that reflected the sun's rays before they reached the ground. |
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There is also a revolving summerhouse, also typical of the Edwardian age, which catches the sun's rays all day. |
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Multiple sundials were situated in strategic locations along the terraces, capturing the sun's light as it made its daily path across the sky. |
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A sun dog is refracted sunlight through ice crystals aloft which creates little bright spots close to the sun's orb. |
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In this image the sungazer lizard is basking in the sun on a dry rock absorbing in the sun's heat rays. |
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Important in this process are the green chlorophyll pigments in leaves which capture the sun's energy. |
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In the palms of his black gloves, the crystal flute sparkled with the sun's ray. |
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The chromosphere is the first layer of atmosphere above the sun's surface layer. |
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Keeping the house well-insulated can make good use of the sun's warmth passively and reduce one's reliance on electricity from the city. |
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Use the sun's energy via solar panels, wind, wave and hydroelectric power to convert water into hydrogen and oxygen. |
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A great deal of time is spent studying the sun's seasonal angles, capturing or controlling it with clerestories and tilted roof planes. |
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I along with many other men occasionally wear a hat with a peak to protect my eyes from the sun's rays. |
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Only green plants are capable of this photosynthetic feat, converting the sun's energy into food. |
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As the last of the sun's rays glinted pinkly off the top of the eastern wall, the smell of a watery stew scented the area. |
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Be sure to keep your hair well moisturized and conditioned to counter the sun's damaging effects. |
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When the sun's unobstructed rays hit the outside surface of your windows, the light immediately converts to heat as it passes through the window. |
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The atoms become ionized by the sun's ultraviolet radiation and are then accelerated to enormous energies by the solar wind. |
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The instant coolness sucked away all the sun's heat and chilled him more quickly than he had expected. |
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That's because the sun's magnetic field begins flipping polarity, and the disordered field can't efficiently deflect dust particles. |
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With each moment that passes, the sun's color shimmers and changes from startling purples and magentas to the soft hues of cornflower blue. |
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The evergreen holly was worshiped as a promise of the sun's return, and some say that Christ's crown of thorns was made of holly. |
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She nods a curt reply as she is deeply engrossed in letting the sun's rays bathe her pale, freckly body. |
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The recurve of the leaf blade will focus the sun's rays and increase the heat slightly within the leaf's cusp. |
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The dust would then scatter some of the sun's rays back into space, cooling off the Earth. |
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Exerting a massive effort, she finally wrenched them open, then immediately shut them again to escape from the bright sun's dazzling rays. |
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The pale blue cobblestones glistened as the sun's rays sparkled on the light sheen of water. |
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Solar sails will use the sun's energy to propel spacecraft across the cosmos. |
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Granny viewed the eclipse by projecting the sun's image on to a sheet through her binoculars. |
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Appearing as a black disc 30 times smaller than the sun's diameter, it will slowly move from left to right over the course of six hours. |
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Not a word did he speak to the little girl, but began singing a little ditty, an old tune full of light and the sun's laughter. |
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With his hair tinged by the sun's rays, he looked like a dog fox who'd out-witted his pursuers once again. |
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The sun's rays, either direct or bounced off the ground, affect the skin and can produce eye strain or temporarily impair vision. |
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Our last stop is a spot called Emerald Cave, where the sun's rays don't reach the water, but the water glows a vivid aquamarine, as if lit from below. |
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The contents support a remarkably simple way of envisioning how members of the sun's family, including our home planet, make their circumsolar rounds. |
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Inside is an altar-like sculpture cut from the living rock which still shows signs of carved projections that could be used to trace the sun's course during the year. |
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We passively use the heat of the sun's rays in our everyday life. |
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The sun's blaring in my eyes, sweat's trickling down my back in runnels, and he comes walking up the hill, a heavy jacket zipped up to the neck on this hot August day. |
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The sun's rays kiss the body of the mountains as the frosts on the grass melts and the dew drops on the flower sparkle like a diamond to the glitter of light. |
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The sun's surface layer is divided into alternating bands of electric charge, either positive or negative, and each band has a different magnetic polarity. |
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In some parts, the sun's rays struggle to pierce the tree canopies, casting the whole world in a greenish gloom. |
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The cold steel glimmered brightly, being bathed in sun's rays. |
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A church in Isleworth may soon be powered by the sun's rays with the opening of a new community hall topped by a space-age roof, it was revealed this week. |
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But this gem was like all of those gems combined somehow, and it gleamed in the morning light, catching the sun's rays and casting them back at the poet. |
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China is to throw its economic might behind a national solar power plan that could result in it becoming one of the world's biggest harvesters of the sun's energy. |
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Older trees are less subject to sun scald because the thicker bark can insulate dormant tissue from the sun's heat ensuring the tissue will remain dormant and cold hardy. |
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Tall concrete buildings, trucks, and tuk-tuks, softly lit by the sun's early morning glow, are soon replaced by brown rice paddies, green fields, and tall, arching trees. |
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Incorporated within the timber louvres are troughs for planting that will gradually become established on the north side, screening and diffusing the sun's glare. |
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I simply cannot wait to get out there and really make the most of the sun's light, baking my skin to a crisp as I pursue manly outdoor activities. |
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Slugs and snails are mainly nocturnal, and the sun's heat can be fatal to slugs and to all mollusc eggs, so cultivate the soil thoroughly to bring them to the surface. |
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The first, known as the meridional flow pattern, circulates between the sun's equator and its poles over a period of 17 to 22 years and acts like a conveyor belt of sunspots. |
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Even if you're not sunning yourself at the beach, the sun's UV rays are still powerful enough to do permanent damage, especially to children's sensitive skin. |
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If the faculae loom above the surface, they could radiate light efficiently, thereby boosting the sun's overall brightness, especially during the solar maximum. |
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The sun's rays came though the trees and the birds were fluttering around. |
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In regard to maintenance, if your sidelights are more than a few years old, check them at night to see if the lens has perhaps faded from the sun's rays. |
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Slatted or lattice style roofs are just enough to diffuse the sun's rays when they are at their peak without covering your deck or patio completely. |
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As the sun's first rays slowly crept over the horizon, he began to speak. |
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The sun's morning light shone softly, illuminating her blue eyes. |
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The rosebuds known as taifi to the locals are plucked when they have just opened up and before the sun's rays diminish the oils, which contain the essence of their perfume. |
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The room, darkened both by the sun's setting and the closed blinds, was shut of all noise and interference, save for the monitoring devices secured around the bed. |
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Having forgotten his baseball cap in a hasty exit from his home after siesta, he has to make do with a flimsy local newspaper to fend off the Mesopotamian sun's hot temper. |
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The azure sky above was only slightly clouded by the thick cumulus clouds that strayed away from each other, to occasionally cover up the sun's streams of rays. |
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Most days, the large columns that supported the high walls of the shopping center shielded the market from the sun's rays or fierce rains or winds. |
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The sun's edge was already touching the line of the horizon and around it, the sky, the clouds, and the ocean were covered with a beautiful coat of orange. |
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Clouds covered the sun, a respectful veil shading the sun's merry rays. |
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Pupils at a junior and infants school are wearing hats at playtimes in a bid to protect themselves from the sun's ultra-violet rays, which can cause skin cancer. |
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The sky was red, red tinged with oranges and gold and purples and a faint hint of yellow outlining the sun's edge as it blurred into the landscape. |
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It stands towering over the landscape, the sun's rays glancing off the polished superstructure to dance upon the gently rippling waters of the canal below. |
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So how can you get the sun's benefits without overexposing yourself to its harmful rays? |
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A silver portal opens in the sky and a ebony alicorn stallion gallops from it the silver tips on his black wings shine in the sun's light. |
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Here he observed most accurately the variation of the sun's motion and the length of the days and the nights in summer and winter respectively. |
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Photosynthetic cells use the sun's energy to split off water's hydrogen from oxygen. |
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Some scholars suggest the story of Heracles is an allegory for the sun's yearly passage through the twelve constellations of the zodiac. |
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Later the daily tides were explained more precisely by the interaction of the Moon's and the sun's gravity. |
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The other places see the penumbra of the moon's shadow fall on the earth, so the eclipse is partial, and part of the sun's disc is still visible. |
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The difficulties of photoheliography consist principally in the rapidity with which the sun's image acts upon the sensitive film. |
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The sun's right ascension in time is useful to the practical astronomer in regular observatories, who adjusts his clock by sideral time. |
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The movie shows light at 304 Angstroms and 171 Angstroms, both of which help scientists observe the sun's atmosphere, or corona. |
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The study analyzes the interactions on the Moon among electrostatic adhesive forces, the angle of incidence of the sun's rays, and lunar gravity. |
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This layer of gases warms a planet by trapping the sun's heat, a process called the greenhouse effect. |
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What's also cool is the combo of an athermic windscreen which, along with the tinted glass, helps to keep the sun's rays at bay. |
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It happens at the peak of each solar cycle as the sun's inner magnetic dynamo re-organizes itself. |
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The top is black to absorb the sun's heat and the bottom is black to reradiate that heat onto the food. |
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These carotenoids accumulate in the macula, where they exert a protective effect by filtering the phototoxic bluelight portion of the sun's rays. |
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It followed the feast of Beltane, celebrating the sun's life-generating powers, while Samhain beckoned to winter and the dark nights ahead. |
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As the sun begins to hang high I find myself not running from the Maine State Bird, the blackfly, as much as from the sun's incessant rays. |
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Entranced by the serenity of Southern Europe's Mediterranean coastline, I basked in the sun's brilliance as it shimmied across the azure water. |
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It has spent recent years studying the heliosheath, which surrounds the outer edge of the solar system, where the sun's influence wanes. |
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Mesurol, the other molluscicide, works better in cloudy conditions since it can kill snails and slugs without the sun's help. |
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Scientists use this kind of picture, called a coronagraph, in which the sun is obscured, to better see the sun's atmosphere, the corona. |
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These events were attributed to violent solar storms that occurred during the sun's most active period in the 11-year solar cycle. |
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And it is extremely important to understanding how the sun's magnetism generates the solar cycle. |
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When applied to vertical outside walls, Enviro Coat Reflective deflects a portion of the sun's radiant heat away from the building. |
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Look for a lotion with an SPF of at least 15, which means that it will block or deflect 93 percent of the sun's UVB rays. |
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A neutron star is the compressed core left behind when a star weighing less than about 30 times the sun's mass explodes as a supernova. |
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And even if this solar storm passes without mischief, the sun's surface is roiling with sun spots aimed at our area and preparing to flare. |
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All too often I see drivers struggling with sun visors and lifting a hand to shield their eyes from the sun's glare. |
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I therefore made four sunwise animals and gave a couple of fun facts about how these animals protect their skin against the sun's strong UV rays. |
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The apparent conflict in the sun's speed arises from the fact that different frames of reference are involved. |
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The explosions also disrupted the Van Allen Belts, which protect the Earth from the sun's rays. |
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In the sun's family of nine planets, Jupiter far outdazzles the other eight. |
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Such covered spaces would protect living organisms from the sun's ultraviolet rays and from micrometeorites, which shower down on Mars like a continual rain. |
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There are over 17,200 solar cells on the plane's upper wing surface, fuselage and tailplane that collect the sun's energy which powers the engines. |
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Scientists refer to this new region as a magnetic highway for charged particles because our sun's magnetic field lines are connected to interstellar magnetic field lines. |
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In addition to an X-ray telescope, Hinode carries a visible-light telescope to study the sun's surface and a magnetograph to monitor magnetic fields associated with sunspots. |
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Firefighters believe the sun's rays caught a magnifying vanity mirror on a table and bounced the light back on to a pillowslip, settling it alight. |
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When it reaches the stratosphere, it turns into sulfuric acid particles, which reflect the sun's rays, further reducing the amount of radiation reaching Earth's surface. |
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And this fell tempest shall not cease to rage Until the golden circuit on my head, Like to the glorious sun's transparent beams, Do calm the fury of this mad-bred flaw. |
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The stability of the night time inversion is usually destroyed soon after sunrise as the sun's energy warms the ground, which warms the air in the inversion layer. |
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Our use of ozone-depleting substances such as chlorofluorocarbons had torn a hole in the ozone layer that protects us from the sun's harmful ultraviolet radiation. |
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The Arctic poppy is heliotropic, tracing the sun's path with its flower head to maximize the solar rays and covering its stem in dark hairs to absorb heat. |
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Pasachoff's team at Maui's Haleakala Observatory snapped some 660,000 images of the transit using a coronagraph, a special telescope that blocks part of the sun's brightness. |
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The vividly coloured textiles filter and regulate the sun's glare, so that from inside, the taut panels shimmer and pulsate with coloured light like stained-glass windows. |
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A recent Nasa paper suggested that the spacecraft was still in a transition zone between the sun's sphere of influence and the rest of the Milky Way. |
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That said, since the sun's photons are constantly pushing the solar sails, the satellite keeps on accelerating and would beat a conventional rocket in a race to Pluto. |
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Darker eggs protected developing stinkbugs from the sun's harmful ultraviolet rays, which are probably most intense on a leaf's sun-exposed top surface. |
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Humans have tracked this solar cycle continuously since it was discovered in 1843, and it is normal for there to be many flares a day during the sun's peak activity. |
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Though the sky is fogged with the wildfires south of this location, dulling the sun's piercing ultraviolet punishment, still, my mind is wandersome. |
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The passive solar house was initially designed using a heliodon to determine how the sun's rays shines on the house any time, day, and month of the year. |
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