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temperature A degree of hotness or coldness the can be measured using a thermometer. Also a measure of how fast the atoms and molecules of a substance are moving (see Kinetic energy). Temperature is measured in degrees on the Fahrenheit, Celsius, and Kelvin scales.
Ãâó: eo.ucar.edu/webweather/glossary.html
temperature A measure of heat intensity. Absolute - The temperature above absolute zero, or temperature plus 273?C or 459?F. Ambient - The temperature of the surrounding medium, usually used to refer to the temperature of the air in which a structure is situated or a device operates.
Ãâó: www.fuelcellscanada.ca/glossary.html
temperature Measure of the energy in a substance. The more heat energy in the substance, the higher the temperature. troposphere - The lowest layer of the atmosphere where almost all weather occurs. The troposphere contains about 80% of the atmosphere's mass and is characterized by temperatures that normally decrease with altitude. The boundary of the troposphere and the stratosphere depends on latitude and season. It ranges from as low as 8 km over the poles to as high as 16-18 km in the tropics. top U
Ãâó: asd-www.larc.nasa.gov/GLOBE/glossary.html
temperature temperature is what you measure with a thermometer (this is kind of an operational definition). More precisely, the temperature of a system tells how much the internal energy of the system grows upon a given increase of entropy
Ãâó: www.maxwellian.demon.co.uk/faq/glossary.html
temperature A measure of how hot or cold something is
Ãâó: www.rcn27.dial.pipex.com/cloudsrus/glossary.html
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