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  2. Kelvin water dropper - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kelvin_water_dropper

    The Kelvin water dropper, invented by Scottish scientist William Thomson (Lord Kelvin) in 1867, [1] is a type of electrostatic generator.Kelvin referred to the device as his water-dropping condenser.

  3. Trevor Rainbolt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trevor_Rainbolt

    Trevor Rainbolt (born November 7, 1998), known mononymously as Rainbolt, is an American social media personality and player of GeoGuessr, an online geography game. He initially gained popularity through posting videos on TikTok, which showed GeoGuessr gameplay in his characteristic high-intensity style and often involved challenges or self-imposed limitations.

  4. Training (meteorology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Training_(meteorology)

    Showers and thunderstorms along thunderstorm trains usually develop in one area of stationary instability, and are advanced along a single path by prevailing winds.. Additional showers and storms can also develop when the gust front from a storm collides with warmer air outside of th

  5. Precipitation types - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Precipitation_types

    Precipitation occurs when evapotranspiration takes place and local air becomes saturated with water vapor, and so can no longer maintain the level of water vapor in gaseous form, which creates clouds.

  6. J.A.R. - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J.A.R.

    "J.A.R." (alternatively titled "J.A.R. (Jason Andrew Relva)") is a song by the American rock band Green Day. Written by bassist Mike Dirnt about a friend who committed suicide in a car crash, [4] the song was a previously unreleased track from the Dookie sessions but it was later featured on the soundtrack to the movie Angus in 1995.

  7. Guerrilla rainstorm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guerrilla_rainstorm

    A guerrilla rainstorm (ゲリラ豪雨, gerira gō'u) is a Japanese expression used to describe a short, localized downpour of over 100 mm per hour of rain caused by the unpredictable formation of a cumulonimbus cloud.

  8. Einstellung effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Einstellung_effect

    An example water jar puzzle. The water jar test, first described in Abraham S. Luchins' 1942 classic experiment, [1] is a commonly cited example of an Einstellung situation. . The experiment's participants were given the following problem: there are 3 water jars, each with the capacity to hold a different, fixed amount of water; the subject must figure out how to measure a certain amount of ...

  9. Tool use by non-humans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tool_use_by_non-humans

    A crab-eating macaque using a stone. Tool use by non-humans is a phenomenon in which a non-human animal uses any kind of tool in order to achieve a goal such as acquiring food and water, grooming, combat, defence, communication, recreation or construction.