Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Vertical drafts, known as updrafts or downdrafts, are localized regions of warm or cool air that move vertically. A mass of warm air will typically be less dense than the surrounding region, and so will rise until it reaches air that is either warmer or less dense than itself.
Drafts are not indexed by most search engines including Google, [note 4] meaning most readers will not find them. Anyone can search and view drafts on Wikipedia directly using Wikipedia's built-in search engine: simply choose "Advanced", then tick "Draft" and/or "Draft talk" on the list of options (i.e. in this manner).
This category is dedicated to drafts related to films and television for Vertical Entertainment. There are no pages or files in this category. This list may not reflect recent changes ( learn more ).
About Wikipedia; Contact us; ... Mathieugp/drafts/List of linguistic indicators used by the Office québécois de la langue française ... Mdforbes500/Vertical ...
Draft markings on the stern of the Cutty Sark, an example of the Imperial system of such markings. The draft or draught of a ship is a determined depth of the vessel below the waterline, measured vertically to its hull's lowest—its propellers, or keel, or other reference point. [1] Draft varies according to the loaded condition of the ship.
The rear flank downdraft can arise owing to negative buoyancy, which can be generated by cold anomalies produced at the rear of the supercell thunderstorm by evaporative cooling of precipitation or hail melting, or injection of dry and cooler air in the cloud, and by vertical perturbation pressure gradients that can arise from vertical gradients of vertical vorticity, stagnation of ...
User:Antidiskriminator/Drafts of articles/Rebellion in southern Albania User:Antidiskriminator/Drafts of articles/Span family User:Antipodeanarts/new article name here
The relevance of other languages escapes me. What matters in en.wikipedia is what English-speaking people understand. JMcC 17:15, 30 August 2006 (UTC) While I agree thermals are a specialized case, the issue is whether or not there is enough information to warrent a seperate article, or merely a section in the vertical draft article ...