The comparison of thermal conductivity can be measured by the 'k' value. The k value, or Thermal Conductivity, specifies the rate of heat transfer in any homogeneous material. If a material has a k value of 1, it means a 1m cube of material will transfer heat at a rate of 1 watt for every degree of temperature difference between opposite faces. The k value is expressed as 1 W/mK. The lower this value is, the less heat the material will transfer.
Search the Web for K ValueSpecies in stable environments tend to live longer and produce fewer, and sometimes larger, offspring. (K is the constant for carrying capacity in terms of population growth.) This used to be true for whales before their environment was changed. See R-Selection.
Search the Web for K-SelectionThe average of the sea temperature in the first few meters of the oceans
and the temperature 1.5 m above ground on land surfaces.
Note: This is very subjective, the method of calculation and extrapolation to synthesis temperature for regions where there is scant direct temperature measurement (such as at the Poles), varies a lot.
Any wind blowing downslope. Usually cold.
Search the Web for Katabatic WindThe biophysical environment is the symbiosis between the physical environment and the biological life forms within the environment, and includes all variables that comprise the Earth's biosphere.
Search the Web for KelpWhere people sort out their recyclable waste, either into a box, bag or separate bin, and this is then collected from people's houses, like the ordinary waste collection.
Search the Web for Kerbside Recycling SystemDepression or pond found in glacial deposits (see Kame Terrace). Left by a chunk of melted glacier.
Search the Web for Kettle Hole(kWh) 1,000 thousand watts acting over a period of 1 hour. The kWh is a unit of energy. 1 kWh=3600 kJ.
Search the Web for Kilowatt-Hour
International treaty whose aim is to stem global warming, signed in 1997 following negotiations within the U.N.
In December
1997, around 180 nations signed a treaty in Japan, under which 38 industrialized countries committed themselves to reducing emissions of
the six greenhouse gases
blamed for global warming. The Kyoto Protocol stipulates that, between
2008 and 2012, these emissions should be decreased to an average level
5.2% lower than that of 1990.