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  1. 121
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    How geomagnetic storms affect the loss of Starlink satellites in February 2022? by Nizam Ahmad, La Ode Muhammad Musafar Kilowasid, Hanif Fakhrurroja, Neflia, Abdul Rachman, Asnawi Husin, Haries Fathoni

    Published 2025-01-01
    “…The reason for this is that, despite having lower altitudes, all decaying Starlinks were located in the midnight-dawn sector, in which the drift of ionospheric currents was predominantly driven by westward electrojets. On the other hand, all non-decaying Starlink satellites that had higher altitudes resided in the dusk–midnight sector of magnetic local time, where the impact of substorms insignificantly affected their altitudes. …”
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  3. 123

    Reduced aerosols and intensified summertime rainfall in India during the pandemic suggest potentially more amplified precipitation in the future by Fan Wang, Meng Gao

    Published 2025-01-01
    “…Reduced aerosol loading leads to a northward shift of the subtropical westerly jet, which induces a westward movement of the subtropical southern branch trough and negative sea-level pressure anomalies over the eastern Arabian Sea. …”
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  4. 124

    Storm Time Plasma Pressure Inferred From Multimission Measurements and Its Validation Using Van Allen Probes Particle Data by G. K. Stephens, S. T. Bingham, M. I. Sitnov, M. Gkioulidou, V. G. Merkin, H. Korth, N. A. Tsyganenko, A. Y. Ukhorskiy

    Published 2020-12-01
    “…As the main phase of a storm progresses in time, the westward ring current density and pressure increases in the inner magnetosphere particularly on the nightside, becoming more symmetric as the recovery phase progresses. …”
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  5. 125

    On the Ionospheric Disturbances in New Zealand and Australia Following the Eruption of the Hunga Tonga‐Hunga Ha'apai Volcano on 15 January 2022 by Peng Chen, Mingzhu Xiong, Rong Wang, Yibin Yao, Fucai Tang, Hao Chen, Liangcai Qiu

    Published 2023-04-01
    “…Still, the anomalous propagation velocities are more significant than in New Zealand, indicating that the Lamb waves excited by the eruption of the HTHH submarine volcano are directional in propagation speed; westward travels faster than southward. This finding will provide more references for scholars to study the mechanism and characteristics of anomaly propagation.…”
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  6. 126

    Simulating the Tone River eastward diversion project in Japan carried out 4 centuries ago by J. Trošelj, J. Trošelj, N. Hanasaki

    Published 2025-02-01
    “…<p>The Tone River is the largest river in Japan, flowing from the Kanto Plain westward to the Pacific Ocean. The river originally flowed southward, entering Tokyo Bay, but the Tone River eastward diversion project (TREDP) in the 17th century and many later projects changed the flow route to that of today. …”
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  7. 127

    Plio–Quaternary Tectonic Activity in the Northern Nubian Belts: The Main Driving Forces by Enzo Mantovani, Marcello Viti, Daniele Babbucci, Caterina Tamburelli

    Published 2025-01-01
    “…In the northern Nubian belts, the westward push of the Adria–Hyblean–Pelagian domain has been accommodated by oroclinal bending, thrusting and uplifting across the Tell and Atlas belts. …”
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  8. 128
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    Assessing the impact on mode competitiveness of improvements of the Trans-Eurasian railway network by Seyed Mohseni, Edwin van Hassel, Thierry Vanelslander

    Published 2025-02-01
    “…When comparing the (combinations of) transport modes, it turns out that the rail costs are on average 1.5 times to twice as high as when using maritime transport, but the more westward the origin on the Chinese territory, the closer the ratio gets to 1. …”
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  10. 130

    Ionospheric Response to the Extreme 2024 Mother's Day Geomagnetic Storm Over the Latin American Sector by C. S. Carmo, L. Dai, C. M. Wrasse, D. Barros, H. Takahashi, C. A. O. B. Figueiredo, C. Wang, H. Li, Z. Liu

    Published 2024-12-01
    “…This structure drifted westward at a velocity of ∼140 m/s and had a large latitudinal extension, reaching about 36° geomagnetic latitude, this corresponds to an apex height of around 4,500 km. …”
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  11. 131

    A Framework for Developing Biodiversity Conservation Networks Based on Morphological Spatial Pattern Analysis and the Maximum Entropy Model: A Case Study of the Jianghan Plain, Chi... by Xiaohua Guo, Chang Liu, Shibo Bi, Xuewen Zhang

    Published 2025-01-01
    “…Our findings indicated the following: (1) The Jianghan Plain hosts 21 major ecological sources, primarily natural water bodies at the plain’s edge, which can be classified into five primary and 16 secondary sources based on biodiversity grades. (2) The recessive corridors, comprising 10 primary and 95 secondary ones, are mainly concentrated in the central Jianghan Plain, with primary corridors located centrally and westward, characterized by a large overall span. (3) Changhu Lake and Honghu Lake, two critical water bodies with high-quality habitats and significant biodiversity, were identified as key ecological nodes from the ecological sources, bridging and guiding the central and southern corridors. (4) Based on the ecological network distribution and key nodes and corridors, a “three zones, three belts, and two points” strategy was proposed for optimizing the Jianghan Plain’s ecological network. …”
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  12. 132

    Território no mundo A’uwe Xavante by Maria Lucia Cereda Gomide

    Published 2011-03-01
    “…This people has been marked by the migrations in the savannas of central-west Brazil, where they tried to live without contact with the surrounding society, but with the occupation of the region by the Brazilian State, principally with the “westwards march” in the 1930s, resulted in an invaded et enclosed indigenous territory, thus creating grave conflicts and leading to the demarcation of the Xavante indigenous territory in the 1970s. …”
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    Thermospheric Wind Response to March 2023 Storm: Largest Wind Ever Observed With a Fabry‐Perot Interferometer in Tromsø, Norway Since 2009 by S. Oyama, H. Vanhamäki, L. Cai, A. Shinbori, K. Hosokawa, T. Sakanoi, K. Shiokawa, A. Aikio, I. I. Virtanen, Y. Ogawa, Y. Miyoshi, S. Kurita, N. Nishitani

    Published 2024-03-01
    “…The positive Y‐component of the IMF for 6 days before the storm caused a successive westward component of the FPI‐measured wind during the storm main phase. …”
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  17. 137

    Mitochondrial genome insights into the phylogenetics and biogeographic evolution of snow trout (Cyprinidae, Schizothorax) in the Tien Shan Mountains by Akbarjon Rozimov, Yufan Wang, Min Wang, Ming Zou, Jobir Sobirov, Erkin Karimov, Bakhtiyor Kholmatov, Jörg Freyhof, Sirojiddin Namozov, Chongnv Wang, Xinxin Li, Baocheng Guo

    Published 2025-01-01
    “…Notably, S. eurystomus spread westward along the Pamir-Tien Shan corridor, shaping the region’s current biogeographical distribution of snow trout species. …”
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    Observations and Modeling Studies of Solar Eclipse Effects on Oblique High Frequency Radio Propagation by M. L. Moses, L. J. Kordella, G. D. Earle, D. Drob, J. D. Huba, J. M. Ruohoniemi, S. G. Shepherd, V. Sivakumar

    Published 2021-03-01
    “…The received power of backscattered signal decreases during the eclipse, and the slant ranges from the westward looking radar beams initially increase and then decrease after totality. …”
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