Storms
in sentence
289 examples of Storms in a sentence
The first order of consequence: the ocean-based
storms
get stronger.
As the great Kevin Trenberth says, "All
storms
are different now.
The red coating will seal it against the cold of deep space, the purple coating will protect it from the intense heat as it enters the atmosphere of RH-1729, and the green coating will shield it from the alien planet’s electric
storms.
It rearranges itself to be red in deep space, purple as it enters RH-1729’s atmosphere, and green when it flies through the electric
storms.
These are particles, mass, material, spit out from the surface of the sun, and they go screaming through the solar system at 400 kilometers per second, sometimes faster during solar storms, and they go hurtling through interplanetary space towards planets and their atmospheres, and they may provide energy for atmospheric particles to escape as well.
Where there are emergencies like
storms
and earthquakes, when the electricity goes out, when safe water is not available, breast milk can keep babies fed and hydrated.
But with decreases in seasonal sea ice, not only is the Arctic now open to this wave noise, but the number of
storms
and the intensity of
storms
in the Arctic has been increasing.
But these additional tools and bodies weighed down the ship as it battled the
storms
of the southern ocean.
And I think it kind of does, because as you've heard, as the sea levels come up, it takes weaker and weaker
storms
to do something like this.
You might even think about right here, the beautiful land that connected us, that primed us, all the citizen science to begin with, the erosion, the winter
storms
that are getting more violent every year.
Their construction also frequently destroys important ecosystems like mangroves and marshes, which protect coastal areas from storms, provide habitats, and absorb tons of greenhouse gases.
We are heading for an uninhabitable earth: monster storms, killer floods, devastating wildfires, crazy heat waves that will cook us under a blazing sun.
Who, I wondered, is going to give them imagination and stamina and bravery when the
storms
come?
The good news is that we know that a lot of seaweed already reaches the deep ocean, after
storms
or through submarine canyons.
We know that the outlook is grim: stocks collapsing on the front lines of climate change, warming seas, dying reefs, catastrophic storms, trawlers, factory fleets, rapacious ships from richer countries taking more than their share.
Solar
storms
are giant clouds of particles escaping from the Sun from time to time, and a constant reminder that we live in the neighborhood of an active star.
And I, as a solar physicist, I have a tremendous chance to study these solar
storms.
And in the same way that global wind patterns here on Earth can be affected by hurricanes, the solar wind is sometimes affected by solar
storms
that I like to call "space hurricanes."
Nonetheless, solar
storms
can still be responsible for disrupting satellite telecommunications and operations, for disrupting navigation systems, such as GPS, as well as electric power transmission.
By constantly monitoring the Sun, though, we now know where the solar
storms
come from.
So what I do is I use computer simulations in order to analyze but also to predict the behavior of these
storms
when they're just born at the Sun.
When these solar
storms
are moving in space, some of them will inevitably encounter space probes that we humans have sent in order to explore other worlds.
And while these space probes have been made for different scientific endeavors, they can also act like tiny cosmic meteorological stations and monitor the evolution of these space
storms.
And by doing so, my research shows that, actually, solar
storms
have a generic shape, and that this shape evolves as solar
storms
move away from the Sun.
As more than 40 percent of the world's population is living in coastal areas, as sea levels rise and as
storms
get worse and worse, we're going to be more and more underwater.
In winter,
storms
bring powerful waves, which cross the vast ocean unobstructed to detonate on these shores.
He needs to stop the bad weather before the
storms
come— his only hope is a special ritual he’s been planning.
The festival marks the beginning of what is usually the season of abundance, but with the signs pointing to storms, Quexo isn’t feeling too celebratory.
He needs cinnabar for his ritual to ward off the
storms.
There were more tropical
storms
in the North Atlantic than ever before, since records began.
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