A chirp is a signal in which the frequency increases or decreases with time.
Chirp may also refer to:
Filter, filtering or filters may refer to:
Link or Links may refer to:
Eureka often refers to:
Mobile may refer to:
Scratching, sometimes referred to as scrubbing, is a DJ and turntablist technique of moving a vinyl record back and forth on a turntable to produce percussive or rhythmic sounds. A crossfader on a DJ mixer may be used to fade between two records simultaneously.
Raw is an adjective usually describing:
Click, Klick and Klik may refer to:
Sentinel may refer to:
Vegas is short for Las Vegas, a major tourist destination in the United States.
A quest is a journey toward a goal.
Note, notes, or NOTE may refer to:
Vox may refer to:
A metropolis is a large city.
Mentorship is the developmental relationship between a more experienced mentor and a less experienced partner referred to as a protégé or mentee.
Pop or POP may refer to:
From scratch may refer to:
Prodigy, Prodigies or The Prodigy may refer to:
The European Climate Assessment and Dataset (ECA&D) is a database of daily meteorological station observations across Europe and is gradually being extended to countries in the Middle East and North Africa. ECA&D has attained the status of Regional Climate Centre for high-resolution observation data in World Meteorological Organization Region VI.
Homogenization in climate research means the removal of non-climatic changes. Next to changes in the climate itself, raw climate records also contain non-climatic jumps and changes, for example due to relocations or changes in instrumentation. The most used principle to remove these inhomogeneities is the relative homogenization approach in which a candidate station is compared to a reference time series based on one or more neighboring stations. The candidate and reference station(s) experience about the same climate, non-climatic changes that happen only in one station can thus be identified and removed.
The Climate Hazards group Infrared Precipitation (CHIRP) and with Stations (CHIRPS) datasets are two new quasi-global (50°S–50°N), high-resolution, long-term (1981–present) precipitation estimates based on infrared Cold Cloud Duration (CCD) observations."