The snow in Stockholm is melting and partly turning to ice.
Ann
Seriously, you wear shoes like that under those conditions you deserve to be on the ground! At least here in Colorado we know how to dress for the weather.Ann wrote:Slipping in Stockholm. Photo: Tomas Oneborg.
The snow in Stockholm is melting and partly turning to ice.
Excellent! I'm looking forward to it.rstevenson wrote:But change is coming later this week as an arctic blast slides south across the prairies to cover most of the country, in fact much of the continent. (It's coming to get you Chris.)
Halifax also looked like that late yesterday afternoon and into the evening. But it had begun to rain by the time I got up this morning, and the rain washed away the fog.Ann wrote:Well... the icy cold weather disappeared, and we got this instead.November 16, 2016 in Malmö. Photo: Sydsvenskan.
Ann
http://www.planetary.org/blogs/guest-blogs/2016/1114-goes-r-a-goes-primer.html wrote: GOES-R: A GOES Primer
Posted by Heather Hunter
The Planetary Society Blog, 2016/11/14
<<The current GOES-East and GOES-West have been faithfully providing continuous imagery and data on Earth and space weather for almost a decade. So, with the launch of the first of the next generation of GOES satellites, GOES-R, what is NOAA trying to accomplish?>>
http://ghostbusters.wikia.com/wiki/Gozer wrote:
<<GOZER (also known as Gozer the Gozerian, Gozer the Destructor, Gozer the Traveler, Volguus Zildrohar and Lord of the Sebouillia) is the main antagonist of Ghostbusters. It is an ancient, ultra-powerful, malignant entity from another dimension who was summoned to New York City to destroy the world. Gozer was originally worshiped as a god by the Hittites, Mesopotamians, and the Sumerians around 6000 BC. Gozer has two trusted minions – themselves worshiped as demi-gods – that are harbingers of destruction and primary agents for its arrival: Vinz Clortho, The Keymaster and Zuul, The Gatekeeper. Gozer has visited our world twice, in 1984 and 1991, both times assuming the form of the Stay Puft Marshmallow Man.>>
Our high yesterday was -18°C! We got about 6" of fluffy snow. It dipped to -23°C around sunrise this morning, but it's totally sunny today and up to a balmy -10°C- didn't need more than a flannel shirt to be out shoveling snow. Supposed to be back up above freezing for the next week or more. And sunny, of course.Ann wrote:Today was very cold here in Malmö, −12oC in the morning.
I like cold weather. But I like being warm in cold weather. I'll pass on swimming!But some people like to swim when it's cold.
I don't think so. The mechanism is some kind of bimetal coiled spring, so if you lock the needle, there's just an increasing torque as the temperature changes- not enough, I think, for the pointer to slip on its axle. At least, it's lived through about 15 winters on the deck, sometimes under snow or with ice on it, and I've never fiddled with the calibration.geckzilla wrote:If ice somehow locked the needle in place, would the thermometer lose calibration?
With temperatures around the world climbing, melt waters from the continental ice sheets of Greenland and Antarctica are raising sea levels. Those ice sheets are melting from both above and below. Much of the ice lost from ice sheets comes from a process called calving where ice erodes, breaks off, and flows rapidly into the ocean. A large volume of ice is also lost from ice sheets melting on their surfaces.Click to play embedded YouTube video.
To determine to what extent Greenland’s glaciers are being melted from underneath, NASA recently began a 5-year airborne and ship-based mission called Oceans Melting Greenland (OMG).
Previous research has shown that Greenland's glaciers, which flow like rivers of ice into the ocean, sit on the ground deeper below sea level than had been thought. Warm ocean currents sweep across and erode the hidden glacier faces. As a result, they’re melting faster – a few feet a day in summer – than anyone suspected. ...
For this study, a NASA aircraft is flying the Glacier and Ice Surface Topography Interferometer (GLISTIN) instrument around Greenland for a few weeks each year. ...
While OMG is looking at the effects on ice sheets from below, NASA’s Operation IceBridge mission is surveying polar ice from above. The overlap of OMG and IceBridge is providing the most accurate measurements to date of changes in Greenland’s ice sheet mass. ...