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A new study links decreasing cloud cover over the ocean to last year’s spiking heat, adding to research showing Earth’s loss of luster is increasing warming.
Areas including parts of the North Atlantic Ocean experienced a particularly significant fall, the study found. Last year fits into a decade-long decline of low cloud cover, Goessling told CNN.
A decrease in clouds at low altitudes may help explain 2023’s global temperature surge.
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FOX 11 Los Angeles on MSNSouthern California heat wave - here's when temps will peakGusty winds, warm temperatures, and low humidity will elevate fire weather danger in mountainous and interior regions.
A cloud cluster over the Pacific Ocean developed into a low press area (LPA) before dawn on Friday, the state weather bureau said.
The main reason for this record-low cloud reflectivity was a significant decrease in low-altitude cloud cover, particularly over the Atlantic Ocean.
The Ocean City Air Show ended early on Saturday due to low visibility and cloud ceilings.
They identified a decline in low-altitude clouds, specifically over parts of the Atlantic Ocean. This trend is consistent with the extreme 2023 temperatures seen in those same regions.
Science Decline of Reflective Low Clouds May Have Contributed to Recent Record Heat A new study links decreasing cloud cover over the ocean to last year’s spiking heat, adding to research ...
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