Atlanta The Club
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Initial release | Chile |
---|---|
Directors | Hiro Murai |
Composers | Carlos Cabezas |
Screenplay | Pablo Larraín |
Guillermo Calderón | |
Daniel Villalobos | |
Watch film | Watch |
Reviews | www.imdb.com |
Theatrical country of origin release date | Chile |
Music | Carlos Cabezas |
Art director | Estefania Larrain |
Box office | 483,222 USD |
Nominations | Golden Globe Award for Best Foreign Language Film |
Movies/Shows | Atlanta |
Air date | October 18, 2016 |
Writer | Jamal Olori |
Season number | 1 |
Episode number | 8 |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 2325420 |
About Atlanta The Club
Baller Alert! NFL players, not to mention Jeff Miles and the bottle boys at Primal tonight. Paper Boi gonna be in this thang too. Liiiiiiiittttttttt. I got pre sale bands.
Premier League teams are playing footballers facing abuse claims
... After first going to the police in August 2021, Kira emailed the FA, Premier League and The Club about her allegations the following month " in desperation" as she was worried about him continuing to play on such a big platform while he was being investigated...
Maddy Cusack: Footballer faced pressures before death, family say
... The Club told the BBC it could not confirm or deny an investigation was happening...
Sir Elton John visits renamed Yellow Brick Road next to Watford FC
... A fan group called for the name change after the musician, who previously owned The Club in the 1970s and 1980s, performed at the Vicarage Road stadium...
Chris Mason: Brexit means buck now stops with government on immigration
... As a member of the EU, there was free movement of people around The Club, including to and from the UK...
Wayne Rooney denied Freedom of Derby honour
... Rooney had been nominated for his commitment to Derby County when he managed The Club through one of the most turbulent periods in its history...
Climate change: Is the world warming faster than expected?
... " We saw quite rapidly from the satellite data that less sunlight was being reflected and more sunlight was being absorbed by the oceans, " explains Leon Simons, a climate researcher at The Club of Rome group...
Sir Bobby Charlton: Mural tribute to football legend
... The Red Devils legend, who made 758 appearances for The Club, last month...
Who is new minister without portfolio Esther McVey?
... Joining her in The Club of ex-ministers making a governmental comeback, will be Andrea Leadsom and Damian Hinds...
Climate change: Is the world warming faster than expected?
By Matt Mcgrath & Mark PoyntingBBC News climate & science
Climate records have tumbled in 2023.
There have been historically high sea temperatures, worrying lows in Antarctic sea-ice, and Extreme Weather events hitting every Continent - The latest being.
It's now. That's something that no major climate science body expected at The start of The year.
Scientists have long known that temperatures will continue to rise as humans keep releasing record amounts of planet-heating greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide, This is The main cause of Global Warming .
While they are struggling to fully explain 2023's, here are four additional reasons that could be behind The increases.
A 'weird' El NiñoOne key factor is The unusually rapid onset of a natural weather system known as El Niño.
During an El Niño, warmer surface waters in The Eastern Pacific release additional heat into The atmosphere. This typically leads to a surge in global air temperatures.
The graph below shows how a new El Niño is strengthening. It has Not Yet reached The Peak of The Last major one in 2016, as you can see, but is expected to intensify in The Coming months.
The ongoing 2023 El Niño May be releasing even more warmth than previous ones, because The World had previously been in an extended cool Phase - an opposite weather system known as La Niña.
This kept a lid on global temperatures for an unusually long period, as warmth was less able to escape from The Sea surface into The atmosphere.
During This Time , some of which is now finally being released into The atmosphere.
Normally, scientists expect a delay of around three months between maximum El Niño strength and global air temperatures peaking, explains Zeke Hausfather , a climate scientist at Berkeley Earth , a science organisation in The US.
But air temperatures have risen much more quickly during this El Niño than with previous ones, and it's not even reached full strength yet.
As Dr Hausfather puts it, " this El Niño is weird. "
Cutting aerosolsCutting some air pollutants - aimed at cleaning The air that humans Breathe - May actually be having an unintended consequence for warming. That's because some small airborne particles known as aerosols, like sulphate or dust, tend to reflect some of The Sun 's energy back into space. Generally, this cools The Earth 's surface.
Regulations introduced in 2020 to encourage cleaner shipping fuels have reduced global emissions of sulphur dioxide (SO2), a harmful air pollutant for humans to Breathe ,
But this appears to have raised temperatures, especially in shipping hotspots like The North Atlantic.
" We saw quite rapidly from The satellite data that less sunlight was being reflected and more sunlight was being absorbed by The oceans, " explains Leon Simons, a climate researcher at The Club of Rome group.
Not all scientists agree on how important aerosols are for explaining 2023's records.
" It's hard to make The case that The [new shipping fuel] regulation in 2020 would create a sudden jump in 2023 that we didn't see in 2022, " Dr Hausfather argues.
A large volcanic eruptionIn January 2022, there was a huge eruption of The . The eruption plume reached an and triggered.
Importantly for The climate, it also released around 150 million tonnes of water vapour into The stratosphere. Water vapour is a Greenhouse Gas , like carbon dioxide, so May have added to warming.
Studies So Far suggest The eruption May have only had a limited effect on global air temperatures, But scientists are still working to establish its Full Impact .
An Antarctic 'radiator'?The Sea -ice surrounding Antarctica is, satellite data showed in September.
Arctic sea-ice has long been in decline, but until 2017 Antarctic sea-ice had largely defied predictions and remained relatively stable. This could now be changing, with consequences for global temperatures.
Fewer areas of bright, reflective ice mean more of The Sun 's energy is absorbed by The darker ocean surface. In turn, this accelerates warming.
" The concern is that The Antarctic has started to operate like The Arctic , " working " like a radiator rather than a refrigerant" notes Martin Siegert , from The Grantham Institute for Climate Change .
It is unclear whether The Antarctic changes are a contributor to 2023 warmth, or a consequence.
But it indicates how warming could speed up in future, Prof Siegert says.
So is The World warming faster than expected?While The in recent decades, this has Not Yet consistently that scientists expected from climate models.
This provides some reassurance that The World hasn't yet tipped into a new Phase of runaway Climate Change .
However, a group of leading climate scientists recently
They suggest that The climate is yet to fully respond to The Greenhouse gases already emitted. One reason could be The Artificial cooling effect of aerosols. This leaves more warming " in The pipeline" than previously thought, they argue.
Not all scientists agree with this view, but The currently being experienced highlight The Challenges The World is already facing.
Ahead of The crucial, this " should really spur action to accelerate The Phase out of fossil fuels, " explains Lili Fuhr from The Centre for International Environmental Law .
" It doesn't have to be worse than we expected to be a huge problem that society urgently needs to deal with, " says Dr Hausfather.
" Climate Change is as bad as we expected. And that's bad enough. "
Related TopicsSource of news: bbc.com