The Gulf Stream comes up and keeps much of Western Europe warmer than places at the same latitudes. London benefits from that, which is why it is warmer than places of a similar latitude.
Yes, within the context of industrial hygiene (occupational hygiene), radiation is a physical hazard.
It depends on the context. Compared to an atom it is huge, compared to the sun it is tiny.
The "transfer of ownership" translates as "Besitzwechsel"
In this context, radiation means divergence: the emergence of multiple populations, each adapted to their particular niche or otherwise changing relative to their ancestors and siblings, from a common ancestor.
In this context, radiation means divergence: the emergence of multiple populations, each adapted to their particular niche or otherwise changing relative to their ancestors and siblings, from a common ancestor.
It depends on the context: Roman numeral, speed of light (electromagnetic radiation), etc.
The term is "connotation" (as compared to the literal meaning or denotation).
his concept was to make radiation easir due to science
The answer depends on the context. One possible answer is cluster analysis.
In any context, the grasping power of diagram is multifold compared to text
In this context, radiation refers to thermal radiation. Nearly everything in the universe radiates thermally in the form of infrared "light". When something is hotter, it radiates more. All of this radiation has some energy associated with it, which comes from the thermal energy in the object. In the case of a hot drink, more energy is leaving the drink through radiation than is being absorbed.
Large is a comparative term.What may be large in one context may not be so in another.A house garden may be large compared to other house gardens but it is tiny compared to a county, which in turn is small compared to a country,