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Section SS index1191-1199 of 1376 terms

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  • sudden change report—Special meteorological report transmitted by a station to indicate a deterioration or improvement in the weather significant for a particular need, especially aeronautics.
  • sudden ionospheric disturbance—(Abbreviated SID.) A complex combination of sudden changes in the condition of the ionosphere, and the effects of these changes.
    A sudden ionospheric disturbance usually occurs in association with a solar flare and is seen only on the sunlit side of the earth. The return of the ionosphere to its “normal” condition following a pronounced sudden ionospheric disturbance usually takes from half an hour to an hour. The following are the most important effects accompanying a sudden ionospheric disturbance: 1) shortwave fadeout, a condition in which there is a marked and abrupt increase in absorption in the D-region for high-frequency (HF) radio waves, and a consequent loss of long-distance radio reception in this range of frequencies; 2) magnetic crotchet, a sudden change in the horizontal component of the earth's magnetic field due to an increase in the conductivity of the lower ionosphere, the changes being in the nature of an augmentation of the normal quiet-day magnetic change; 3) sudden enhancements of long-wave atmospherics recorded in the frequency range between 10 and 100 kHz, due to the improved reflectivity at oblique incidence of the D-region for such low-frequency radio waves; 4) sudden phase anomalies of discrete low-frequency radio waves (10–100 kHz), due to a lowering of the D-region; and 5) sudden field-strength anomalies of distant low-frequency radio signals (10–100 kHz), due to interference between the ground wave and the sky wave.
  • sudden warming—Same as stratospheric warming.
  • sudois—A southwest wind on Lake Geneva, Switzerland.
  • suer—A violent north-northwest wind at Lake Garda in Italy.
  • suestada—Strong southeast winds occurring in winter along the coast of Argentina, Uruguay, and southern Brazil.
    They cause heavy seas and are accompanied by fog and rain; the counterpart of the northeast storm in North America.
  • sugar berg—An iceberg of porous glacier ice.
  • sugar snow—Same as depth hoar.
  • sukhovei—(Also spelled suchovei.) Literally “dry wind”; in Russia, a dry, hot, dusty wind in the southern steppes.
    It blows principally from the east and frequently brings a prolonged drought and crop damage.
  • sulfates—Chemical derivatives of sulfuric acid; can be regarded as being formed by neutralizing sulfuric acid by an appropriate base, for example, reaction with NaOH forms sodium sulfate.
    Sulfates are a large component of seawater and, hence, sea-salt aerosol.

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