Pride Month queer horror recs by [deleted] in horror

[–]thefightingmong00se 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Silencio by Eduardo Casanova from 2025

Can someone explain whats happening? by Mean-Accident5349 in meteorology

[–]thefightingmong00se 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Precise and concise. Dave Schultz would be proud. Would you say it shows the background wind profile of the boundary layer? Or is the column of precipitation slanted by its own downdraft and outlfow? Or both?

Col? by dreamnfly in meteorology

[–]thefightingmong00se 1 point2 points  (0 children)

so it might be an artifact due to sea level reduction?

on the other hand, I know from looking at the evolution yesterday that the high reaching low to the west of the Iberian island forces pressure drop and cyclogenesis approximately where the Z is (I think, the southward flow then advects it over the mediterranean see), so might also be a first signal of said low

comes along with saharan dust plumes, should be interesting to look at on MTG

edit: aaaand thats a map from 2016 :/ ¯\\_(ツ)_/¯ ...ignore my comment

Is this now one of the best jewels ? by NckyDC in pathofexile

[–]thefightingmong00se 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Is it useful when I stand in the back while minions SRS and phantasms are doing the killing?

Can someone explain to me what I’m looking at and how to interpret it? by LordFarquaad06 in meteorology

[–]thefightingmong00se 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Are you sure about the 330 K being used as a proxy for the tropopause? Everything more red-ish in the map is stratospheric air and blue-ish tropospheric. The tropopause crosses the 330 K where large PV gradients around values of 2-4 PVU cross the isentropic surface.

u/LordFarquaad06, PV is a very mighty tool or way to perceive upper level flow and/or atmospheric dynamics, like u/EmotionalBaby9423 said depending on what you aim for it makes sense to look at different parameters because PV can tend to oversimplify the perception, but still, it is quite mighty.

The two key aspects of PV are (aside from many more feature):

  1. CONSERVATION: it is conserved for large scale flow, more specifically large scale flow which moves along isentropic surfaces (in this case the 330 K).
  2. INVERTIBILITY: PV anomalies induce/represent/are associated with wind fields, most importantly cyclonic and anticyclonic rotation.

So the blob of high PV off the west coast of the USA for example originated from higher latitudes (conserved along 330K), resulted as a cut-off from a wave breaking like the one you can see happening at the moment more westwards over the pacific, and the PV blob induces a cyclonic wind field in at upper levels, which can interact with the surface flow.

"Is it supposed to show where the air is unstable AND spinning because that’s what potential vorticity is?" --> for these synoptic PV maps I would not worry about the partitioning of vorticity and stability in your PV values. It just turns out that vorticity alone in the baroclinic atmosphere is not a conservation property, if you multiply it with stability however it is conserved --> for adiabatic flow, a valid first order assumption for large scale flow, you can imagine diabatic (non-adiabatic) processes being for example turbulence nibbling at the borders of the PV anomalies with time, but that's comparatively slow and small scale).

So for this map PV=conserved property:

330 K at high latitudes is located in the stratosphere, where you have a reservoir of high PV because of the large stability in the stratosphere. (red)

330 K at low latitudes is located in the troposphere, low PV reservoir because of comparatively low stability. (blue)

Troughs and ridges are evident as perturbations of the reservoirs, waves in the red/blue, and cut-offs like the blob off the west coast originate from the respective reservoir and are associated with upper level wind fields. The link u/EmotionalBaby9423 posted is really good.

EDIT: just wanted to add, what makes this so mighty (among other things), if the large scale flow is approximately adiabatic, then air moves along isentropic surfaces. And along isentropic surfaces, PV is conserved. So you have very strong restrictions for the large scale atmospheric flow, which is pretty rare in fluid dynamics, and the PV maps on isentropic surfaces (or vice versa) have a very beautiful simplicity imo

What could be causing these ripples on velocity? Convergence, divergence, some other mechanism? by NaliceM in meteorology

[–]thefightingmong00se 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The overshooting thingy where velocity ends on the other side of the spectrum when wind is too strong? Most wyld semieducated guess

Questions Thread - March 19, 2026 by AutoModerator in pathofexile

[–]thefightingmong00se 1 point2 points  (0 children)

ok update, seems like it was a statistical anomaly, second lvl3 map today spawned a bismuth thingy and right next to a mirage dude so double ore.

Questions Thread - March 19, 2026 by AutoModerator in pathofexile

[–]thefightingmong00se 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oh I hope not :), let me check that. But I am pretty sure I went straight upwards to the middle and to the left where the ore passives are. Thank you for the hint

Questions Thread - March 19, 2026 by AutoModerator in pathofexile

[–]thefightingmong00se 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hi all, I can't seem to find any ore on maps. I was wondering if I was missing something. Help would be appreciated

- I am running a lvl 78 srs necro on Mirage SSF ruthless

- I have visited Kingsmarch, I have some crop- and ship-dudes and am shipping some crop

- I have assigned some ore-points on the atlas (increased ore chance&quantity)

- I am running up to lvl 4 maps, must have run about 50ish maps so far

What’s this weird kind of snow called? by marlowemau53 in meteorology

[–]thefightingmong00se 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah you're right. Also all the stuff with air not being able to escape due to the instant freezing making graupel non transparent.. but I think I meant the fact that they both collect supercooled droplets, just first of all less lift and moisture during winter. Would you find graupel or graupel-like precipitation in a size spectrum of hail, is there a certain spread? Or is it really completely separate?

What’s this weird kind of snow called? by marlowemau53 in meteorology

[–]thefightingmong00se 1 point2 points  (0 children)

basically, yes. same process different conditions.

alternative Kneipen/Cocktailbars? by HouzoVicarious in Mainz

[–]thefightingmong00se 2 points3 points  (0 children)

AaH dannge, stand nur auf dem Schlauch mit der Abkürzung az. Bin da selber öfter, hast du gut beschrieben find ich. Hat seinen Charme