These reinforce the subsidence-induced stability of the atmosphere by cooling surface air masses and creating a strong temperature inversion. |
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Wet air flowing up from the Gulf rose above freezing air to the north forming a temperature inversion above the town. |
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This wind comes to us from the industrial areas of the Ruhr, which has large amounts of pollutants trapped in under the temperature inversion. |
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A temperature inversion is desired for pesticides being applied as aerosols or dusts. |
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Here, the environmental lapse rate, AB, increases with height, a condition known as a temperature inversion. |
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A temperature inversion across the lake allowed this faraway city to be briefly visible. |
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A temperature inversion would result at the top of the shallow layer, trapping any pollutants emitted into that layer. |
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A temperature inversion is formed on still frosty nights and traps the emissions in a layer close to ground level. |
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On Oct. 26, 1948, a temperature inversion laid a blanket of cold, stagnant air over Donora, Pa., a tiny mill town on the Monongahela River. |
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Last night there was a temperature inversion which caused a band of fog about a metre high to cover the local park. |
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A temperature inversion occurs when the air near the soil surface is cooler than the air above it. |
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In the evening on the Namibian savanna, with a sound-reflecting temperature inversion overhead, a loud elephant call may fill an area as large as 300 square kilometers. |
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Morning temperature inversion, which is a frequent phenomenon in the Eordea region, contributes to the higher concentrations of radon that exist near the ground. |
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Under synoptic conditions favorable for migration, broadfront movements of migrants toward the south passed over the mountains, often above a temperature inversion. |
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A temperature inversion is enough to prevent the kind of mixing that is needed to overcome ground drag and transfer the momentum of winds aloft down to the surface. |
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Except for the temperature inversion between 0 and 1 km altitude, these profiles are characterized by a classical decrease with increasing altitude. |
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In winter, the weather phenomenon of temperature inversion worsens the situation. |
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As a result, the temperature inversion layer essentially becomes a stable layer in the atmosphere. |
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They explained that the UFO sightings had been caused by a temperature inversion, where a layer of warm air is trapped under cold air. |
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The PBL is covered by a layer of warmer air, creating what is known as a temperature inversion. |
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This centre is characterized by a strong low-level temperature inversion that produces a stable air stratification. |
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There was a spray application accident because of a temperature inversion, and the spray drifted across the river and destroyed all the crops. |
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Several layers of temperature inversion testify both a strong stratification and a remarkable temporal variability of the atmosphere. |
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A temperature inversion occurs when air at ground level is cooler and more stable than air above the ground. |
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In the case of temperature inversion, the pollutants are trapped at ground level where it causes most harm. |
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Low-level winds during a temperature inversion can cause small spray drops to remain in the air. |
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These fossil fuels interact with sunshine, creating a temperature inversion and the resultant pollutants to the atmosphere. |
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The fog was triggered by coal smoke meeting with cold winter air that was trapped through a temperature inversion. |
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The altitude and strength of the wind shear usually depends on the intensity and height of the temperature inversion. |
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This temperature inversion creates a stable low-lying mass of air in which air pollutants accumulate. |
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After sunset, the surface of the earth cools which, in turn, cools the air near the surface resulting in the development of a temperature inversion. |
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Inversions can develop when a warmer, less dense air mass moves over a cooler, denser air mass creating a temperature inversion where the air is now cooler closer to the surface. |
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Smog also arises in places with stretches of rolling terrain where cold air can get trapped in the terrain's many pockets and cause temperature inversion. |
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In some cases, high smog levels in winter are also associated with a temperature inversion, an atmospheric condition where cold air is trapped at ground level by a layer of warmer air above. |
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There is a clear temperature inversion on the second day and none on the first. |
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The reason for this, he said, is a related phenomenon called temperature inversion. |
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Experts say that the last month's pollution was probably caused initially by a cold snap, forcing huge use of coal, followed by a rare temperature inversion, which trapped emissions under a blanket of warm air. |
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The tropopause is marked in the profile by the beginning of the stratospheric temperature inversion at 12 km above sea level. |
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Do not apply by air when an air temperature inversion exists. |
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In turn, the weaker winds have less capacity to erode the strong temperature inversion at the Antarctic surface. |
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It is quite likely that, during the day, as a temperature inversion existed, katabatic winds formed over the glacier and they were pulsing downhill. |
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However, on calm, clear nights this is often reversed as cold air drainage causes a temperature inversion to occur. |
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Due to their location above the temperature inversion layer, the high mountains of these islands are ideal for astronomical observation. |
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An increase of temperature with height is known as a temperature inversion. |
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If measurements are made to confirm these upper-limit predicted values, they should be taken downwind from the source or during a temperature inversion. |
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Now it has grown into a perfectly wretched phrase that lingers like the smoky air that clings to my beloved Boise Foothills during a midwinter temperature inversion. |
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It can be especially bad in the winter, when a temperature inversion caused by warmer air from the Caspian seeping over the Alborz mountains traps colder, polluted air. |
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It was very bad in winter, when a temperature inversion caused by warmer air from the Caspian seeping over the Alborz mountains trapped colder, polluted air. |
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