| 释义 | 
		Definition of insolation in English: insolationnoun ˌɪnsəˈleɪʃ(ə)nˌɪnsəˈleɪʃ(ə)n mass nountechnical 1Exposure to the sun's rays. 〈技〉曝晒 Example sentencesExamples -  In summer, various shading devices including adjustable sun protecting blinds and coloured curtains reduce insolation.
 -  More exposed microsites receive more insolation, which may be energetically advantageous to incubating birds.
 -  The perforation pattern was carefully designed to maintain visual connectivity to the exterior while minimizing glare and insolation.
 -  While not advocating planar glazing, I wonder if there couldn't have been a less strident approach to making the glass walls, which themselves are causing some problems of insolation and glare.
 -  The glass panels are in fact triple-glazed units, with blinds in the wider cavity automatically activated to cut down insolation.
 
 - 1.1 The amount of solar radiation reaching a given area.
(某地区的)日射量 Example sentencesExamples -  In the annual cycle experiments, however, low winter insolation causes the seaways to freeze.
 -  Long-term changes in the Earth's orbit are believed to cause a redistribution of insolation across both hemispheres, and these changes, in turn, lead to changes in climate.
 -  Actual insolation at Earth's surface and latitude ~ 33° N, some weeks after the autumnal equinox, will of course be less than this; let's call it an even 1 kilowatt per square meter.
 -  Surface temperature affects the extent of habitat suitable for temperature sensitive species and is directly linked to insolation, air temperature, and wind.
 -  The procedure selected the following four variables: direct insolation, slope, Ca and total nitrogen.
 
  
 
 OriginEarly 17th century: from Latin insolatio(n-), from the verb insolare, from in- 'towards' + sol 'sun'.    Definition of insolation in US English: insolationnounˌɪnsəˈleɪʃ(ə)nˌinsəˈlāSH(ə)n technical 1Exposure to the sun's rays. 〈技〉曝晒 Example sentencesExamples -  The glass panels are in fact triple-glazed units, with blinds in the wider cavity automatically activated to cut down insolation.
 -  The perforation pattern was carefully designed to maintain visual connectivity to the exterior while minimizing glare and insolation.
 -  More exposed microsites receive more insolation, which may be energetically advantageous to incubating birds.
 -  While not advocating planar glazing, I wonder if there couldn't have been a less strident approach to making the glass walls, which themselves are causing some problems of insolation and glare.
 -  In summer, various shading devices including adjustable sun protecting blinds and coloured curtains reduce insolation.
 
 - 1.1 The amount of solar radiation reaching a given area.
(某地区的)日射量 Example sentencesExamples -  Long-term changes in the Earth's orbit are believed to cause a redistribution of insolation across both hemispheres, and these changes, in turn, lead to changes in climate.
 -  Surface temperature affects the extent of habitat suitable for temperature sensitive species and is directly linked to insolation, air temperature, and wind.
 -  In the annual cycle experiments, however, low winter insolation causes the seaways to freeze.
 -  The procedure selected the following four variables: direct insolation, slope, Ca and total nitrogen.
 -  Actual insolation at Earth's surface and latitude ~ 33° N, some weeks after the autumnal equinox, will of course be less than this; let's call it an even 1 kilowatt per square meter.
 
  
 
 OriginEarly 17th century: from Latin insolatio(n-), from the verb insolare, from in- ‘towards’ + sol ‘sun’.     |