false
no
solid
weather. The state of the atmosphere at a given time and place, with respect to variables such as temperature, moisture, wind velocity, and barometric pressure. a. Adverse or destructive atmospheric conditions, such as high winds or heavy rain: encountered weather five miles out to sea.
Not only possible, but certain. Weather predictions are wrong more than they are correct.----------------------------------------------------------------------------------Not only is it possible, it is inevitable that there will be errors in weather predictions.The atmospheric physics that controls weather is what is called a "chaotic system" or a "deterministic chaotic system". What this means is that the physics while "deterministic" (i.e. future states can always be determined exactly if the current state is known exactly) but the behavior of the system looks "chaotic" (i.e. unpredictable), because the current state can never be determined exactly and after enough time the state of the system is ultra sensitive to indistinguishably different current states resulting in wildly varying future states.So, no matter how hard you try to make a correct weather prediction, at some point in the future your prediction will be completely different from the actual weather at that time. You will be wrong.
The lithosphere is the outer rocky shell of the Earth, based on the physical state of the material (brittle). The lithosphere is a combination of the crust, and the brittle uppermost mantle to which it is attached.
no
the current state of lithospere is that it can cause earthquake if there is a little fault
what is weather
Solid
False. Electrical current flows from a high pressure state (called hot) to a state of rest (called ground or neutral).
solid
Some other words for weather are: 1. Meteorology 2. Current State Of The Atmosphere 3. Current Conditions Hope this helped! :)
Current state of the atmosphere, including winds, moisture, and tempeture.
Solid
Solid
isostasy
weather. The state of the atmosphere at a given time and place, with respect to variables such as temperature, moisture, wind velocity, and barometric pressure. a. Adverse or destructive atmospheric conditions, such as high winds or heavy rain: encountered weather five miles out to sea.