A hook echo is a hook shape on a reflectivity image from a weather radar usually on the southwest flank of a thunderstorm, often appearing red or orange on the screen. See the link below for a picture.
The hook echo is one of the classical hallmarks of tornado-producing supercell thunderstorms as seen on a weather radar. The echo is produced by rain, hail, or even debris being wrapped around the supercell. The National Weather Service considers the presence of a hook echo as sufficient to justify issuing a tornado warning
An Echo-echo-echo-echo! The answer is Echo
Ribosomes look like tiny grains of sand. They can be found in the cytoplasm of a cell or attached to the rough E.R.. They make protein for a cell.
echo horizon
clap and listen for the echo an echo is just a reverberation of sound bouncing off something solid about 17 meters away and returning will produce an echo. You can't litterally find an echo just clap and listen for one.
thesis echo is when people who don't know this and look for it like bob the builder
The hook echo is one of the classical hallmarks of tornado-producing supercell thunderstorms as seen on a weather radar. The echo is produced by rain, hail, or even debris being wrapped around the supercell. The National Weather Service considers the presence of a hook echo as sufficient to justify issuing a tornado warning
boobies
yes cut it in half on one side then bend it to look like a hook
on a 2002 echo insert a wire hook inside the door body and fish near the keyhole,
On a reflectivity image, you look for a hook-shaped appendage on a thunderstorm, most often on the southwest side of it (a hook echo). On a velocity image you look for and area of bright red and bright green right next to each other in a small area (a velocity couplet).
It's called a locker hook and is used for weaving, not crochet. But it sure does look like a crochet hook.
An echo is a reflected sound wave, so in real life it doesn't look like anything. However, on a sonograph, it would look very similar to the original sound wave form, just quieter and perhaps a bit distorted depending upon the reflecting surface.
It looks like a hook with a dot at the bottom. Here's an example. (?)
You might describe a "J" as a hook or a fishhook.
The ball bounces back and forth, like an echo.
It was made by Echo. I have one, and I have an Echo CS440 EVL. Although the latter is a larger saw, when you sit them side by side they look like twins.