
Advanced Search
advanced search
Type:
- (-) Remove Article Bulletin filter Article Bulletin
Bulletin nº:
- (-) Remove Vol 65 (2) - 2016 filter Vol 65 (2) - 2016
- Vol 64 (1) - 2015 (11) Apply Vol 64 (1) - 2015 filter
- Vol 56 (3) - 2007 (8) Apply Vol 56 (3) - 2007 filter
- Vol 64 (2) - 2015 (6) Apply Vol 64 (2) - 2015 filter
- Vol 58 (1) - 2009 (4) Apply Vol 58 (1) - 2009 filter
- Vol 63 (2) - 2014 (4) Apply Vol 63 (2) - 2014 filter
- Vol 65 (1) - 2016 (4) Apply Vol 65 (1) - 2016 filter
- Vol 57 (1) - 2008 (3) Apply Vol 57 (1) - 2008 filter
- Vol 56 (4) - 2007 (2) Apply Vol 56 (4) - 2007 filter
- Vol 62 (1) - 2013 (2) Apply Vol 62 (1) - 2013 filter
- Vol 62 (2) - 2013 (2) Apply Vol 62 (2) - 2013 filter
- Vol 57 (4) - 2008 (1) Apply Vol 57 (4) - 2008 filter
- Vol 58 (3) - 2009 (1) Apply Vol 58 (3) - 2009 filter
- Vol 60 (2) - 2011 (1) Apply Vol 60 (2) - 2011 filter
- Vol 61 (1) - 2012 (1) Apply Vol 61 (1) - 2012 filter
- Vol 62 (Special Issue) - 2013 (1) Apply Vol 62 (Special Issue) - 2013 filter
- Vol 68 (1) - 2019 (1) Apply Vol 68 (1) - 2019 filter
3 contents match your search.
Bulletin nº Vol 65 (2) - 2016
Theme: Water
3
Publish Date: 3 November 2016
Those who question the importance of climate change sometimes claim that reducing carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) emissions into the atmosphere will have a very limited effect, because water vapour is the most dominant greenhouse gas. If that is the case, they wonder why bother so much about CO 2 and other greenhouse gases? Observations by the WMO Global Atmosphere Watch programme have helped to investigate this in some detail.
Bulletin nº Vol 65 (2) - 2016
Theme: Observations
1
Publish Date: 1 November 2016
At 05:16 UTC on 7 October 2014, the Japanese satellite Himawari-8 atop an H-IIA rocket took off from the Yoshinobu Launch Complex Pad 1 at the Tanegashima Space Centre in Japan. The launch was flawless and the satellite arrived a few weeks later at its final geostationary orbiting position 36 000 km above the equator at 140.5°E, just north of Papua New Guinea in the Western Pacific Ocean. It was the first of a new generation of satellites that would start operations in the 2015-2021 timeframe. These new meteorological satellites have enhanced observation capability that will bring benefits,...
Bulletin nº Vol 65 (2) - 2016
Theme: Climate
1
Publish Date: 1 November 2016
It is the integration of meteorological service delivery for land transport that will be the biggest challenge for National Meteorological and Hydrological Services (NMHSs). The land transport network is much...