Weather Whys: Facts, Myths, and Oddities

Author:   Paul Yeager (Paul Yeager)
Publisher:   Penguin Putnam Inc
ISBN:  

9780399535703


Pages:   224
Publication Date:   02 March 2010
Recommended Age:   From 18 years
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
Limited stock is available. It will be ordered for you and shipped pending supplier's limited stock.

Our Price $39.47 Quantity:  
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Weather Whys: Facts, Myths, and Oddities


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Full Product Details

Author:   Paul Yeager (Paul Yeager)
Publisher:   Penguin Putnam Inc
Imprint:   TarcherPerigee
Dimensions:   Width: 14.00cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 21.00cm
Weight:   0.191kg
ISBN:  

9780399535703


ISBN 10:   0399535705
Pages:   224
Publication Date:   02 March 2010
Recommended Age:   From 18 years
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Inactive
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
Limited stock is available. It will be ordered for you and shipped pending supplier's limited stock.

Table of Contents

Reviews

If you're an armchair weather expert, a weather junkie or simply enjoy the intricacies of the world's most turned-to conversation topic, look no further than Weather Whys: Fact, Myths, and Oddities by meteorologist and editor Paul Yeager. In this slender volume, Yeager sets out to give readers a basic appreciation for storms, winds, freezing rain, puffy clouds and the like, by first giving readers a breakdown of just what these things are. Hail, for instance, happens when supercooled water freezes on dust particles that are then pushed back into clouds via updraft, over and over again, accumulating more water, and more size, until they finally crash onto our heads and cars. <br> Like a science teacher who clearly enjoys his subject and has a knack for explaining it, Yeager's easy-to-digest writing comes with a lot of requisite enthusiasm. Lightning doesn't get enough respect, he writes-and did you know that the temperature of a lightning bolt is estimated to be as much as 54,00


If you're an armchair weather expert, a weather junkie or simply enjoy the intricacies of the world's most turned-to conversation topic, look no further than Weather Whys: Fact, Myths, and Oddities by meteorologist and editor Paul Yeager. In this slender volume, Yeager sets out to give readers a basic appreciation for storms, winds, freezing rain, puffy clouds and the like, by first giving readers a breakdown of just what these things are. Hail, for instance, happens when supercooled water freezes on dust particles that are then pushed back into clouds via updraft, over and over again, accumulating more water, and more size, until they finally crash onto our heads and cars. Like a science teacher who clearly enjoys his subject and has a knack for explaining it, Yeager's easy-to-digest writing comes with a lot of requisite enthusiasm. Lightning doesn't get enough respect, he writes-and did you know that the temperature of a lightning bolt is estimated to be as much as 54,000oF (five times the temperature of the sun) ? The book is packed with fascinating facts like these. Yeager reveals that it's always cooler after a thunderstorm ; that seeking shelter under a highway overpass during a tornado is a really bad idea (the speed of the wind will increase); that snow-eating wind allows snow to vanish rather than melt and a whole lot of sports-and-weather phenomena like the fact that high humidity allows a baseball to travel farther, increasing the likelihood of home runs. With gems like these, Weather Whys is already a candidate for bathroom book of the year. - Emagazine.com


If you're an armchair weather expert, a weather junkie or simply enjoy the intricacies of the world's most turned-to conversation topic, look no further than Weather Whys: Fact, Myths, and Oddities by meteorologist and editor Paul Yeager. In this slender volume, Yeager sets out to give readers a basic appreciation for storms, winds, freezing rain, puffy clouds and the like, by first giving readers a breakdown of just what these things are. Hail, for instance, happens when supercooled water freezes on dust particles that are then pushed back into clouds via updraft, over and over again, accumulating more water, and more size, until they finally crash onto our heads and cars. <br> Like a science teacher who clearly enjoys his subject and has a knack for explaining it, Yeager's easy-to-digest writing comes with a lot of requisite enthusiasm. Lightning doesn't get enough respect, he writes-and did you know that the temperature of a lightning bolt is estimated to be as much as 54,000oF


If you're an armchair weather expert, a weather junkie or simply enjoy the intricacies of the world's most turned-to conversation topic, look no further than Weather Whys: Fact, Myths, and Oddities by meteorologist and editor Paul Yeager. In this slender volume, Yeager sets out to give readers a basic appreciation for storms, winds, freezing rain, puffy clouds and the like, by first giving readers a breakdown of just what these things are. Hail, for instance, happens when supercooled water freezes on dust particles that are then pushed back into clouds via updraft, over and over again, accumulating more water, and more size, until they finally crash onto our heads and cars. Like a science teacher who clearly enjoys his subject and has a knack for explaining it, Yeager's easy-to-digest writing comes with a lot of requisite enthusiasm. Lightning doesn't get enough respect, he writes-and did you know that the temperature of a lightning bolt is estimated to be as much as 54,000oF (five times the temperature of the sun) ? The book is packed with fascinating facts like these. Yeager reveals that it's always cooler after a thunderstorm ; that seeking shelter under a highway overpass during a tornado is a really bad idea (the speed of the wind will increase); that snow-eating wind allows snow to vanish rather than melt and a whole lot of sports-and-weather phenomena like the fact that high humidity allows a baseball to travel farther, increasing the likelihood of home runs. With gems like these, Weather Whys is already a candidate for bathroom book of the year. -Emagazine.com If you''re an armchair weather expert, a weather junkie or simply enjoy the intricacies of the world''s most turned-to conversation topic, look no further than Weather Whys: Fact, Myths, and Oddities by meteorologist and editor Paul Yeager. In this slender volume, Yeager sets out to give readers a basic appreciation for storms, winds, freezing rain, puffy clouds and the like, by first giving readers a breakdown of just what these things are. Hail, for instance, happens when supercooled water freezes on dust particles that are then pushed back into clouds via updraft, over and over again, accumulating more water, and more size, until they finally crash onto our heads and cars. Like a science teacher who clearly enjoys his subject and has a knack for explaining it, Yeager''s easy-to-digest writing comes with a lot of requisite enthusiasm. Lightning doesn''t get enough respect, he writes-and did you know that the temperature of a lightning bolt is estimated to be as much as 54,000oF (five times the temperature of the sun) ? The book is packed with fascinating facts like these. Yeager reveals that it''s always cooler after a thunderstorm ; that seeking shelter under a highway overpass during a tornado is a really bad idea (the speed of the wind will increase); that snow-eating wind allows snow to vanish rather than melt and a whole lot of sports-and-weather phenomena like the fact that high humidity allows a baseball to travel farther, increasing the likelihood of home runs. With gems like these, Weather Whys is already a candidate for bathroom book of the year. - Emagazine.com


Author Information

Paul Yeager is the managing editor of Accuweather.com and a freelance writer. As a child, he was annoyed when reading, writing, and arithmetic were referred to as the ""Three R's,"" and he hasn't changed a bit over the years. He lives in Altoona, PA.

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