"1. moisture (water vapor) in the air near the surface
2. instability - relatively large decrease of air temperature with height
3. lift - some process (such as a front) that forces air to rise"
The air is dry during the summer and any moisture amount is increased in the afternoon as the temperature cools.
After reviewing the graph you posted with the question and also reviewing the 2011 reference tables, the estimated number of daylight hours that can occur on January 1 at 40° N latitude is 8.5 hours - 9.5 hours. Either of these will be correct to use.
During the age of contact the Spanish Empire and the French colonial Empire have claimed the most land in Texas.
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Answer: The greater the distance to a galaxy, the greater its redshift</h2>
When we talk about the <u>visible electromagnetic spectrum</u>, we know it starts in violet-blue and ends in red.
Now, in this context the astronomer Edwin Powell Hubble observed several celestial bodies, and when obtaining the spectra of distant galaxies he observed the spectral lines were displaced towards the <u>red</u><u> </u>(red shift), whereas the nearby stars showed a spectrum displaced to the <u>blue</u>.
From there, Hubble deduced that the farther the galaxy is, the more redshifted it is in its spectrum, and noted that all galaxies are <em>"moving away from each other with a speed that increases with distance"</em>, and enunciated the now called<u> Hubble–Lemaître Law</u>.
This means in the past the distance between two galaxies was smaller than at present, being this the proof that <u>the universe is expanding</u> (like a balloon expands when it is filled with air or another gas).
At this poitn it is important to stay clear that <u>the redshift is not produced by the relative movement of the galaxies with each other</u>. This effect is in fact, due to the <u>own expansion of the space</u> among the galaxies.
1:Plates move away from one another at divergent boundaries. This happens at mid-ocean ridges<span>. Plates move towards one another at convergent boundaries; one plate is forced below another in a process called subduction.
2:</span><span>In areas where the </span>plates<span> come together, sometimes volcanoes </span>will<span> form. Volcanoes</span>can<span> also form in the middle of a </span>plate<span>, where magma rises upward until it erupts on the seafloor, at what is called a “hot spot.” The Hawaiian </span>Islands<span> were </span>formed<span> by such a hot spot occurring in the middle of the Pacific </span>Plate<span>.
I hope this helps!</span>