C
- Calibration
- The process whereby a position on the scale of an instrument is identified
with the magnitude of the signal (or input force) actuating the instrument.
- Calibration error
- The inaccuracy that the manufacturer permits when the unit is calibrated
in the factory.
-
Calm
- Wind with a speed below 1 knot (1 mph); Beaufort scale number 0.
-
Calorie
- A unit of heat originally defined as the amount of heat required to raise
the temperature of water through one degree centigrade (the gram-calorie or
small calorie), but this proved to be insufficiently precise. The 15°
gram-calorie (cal15) is the amount of heat required to raise the temperature
of one gram of water from 14.5° to 15.5°C, and is equal to 4.1855 joules. The
kilogram calorie or large calorie (Kcal, kg-cal, or Cal) is 1,000 times as
large as a calorie.
-
Calorimeter
- An instrument designed to measure quantities of heat. Sometimes used in
meteorology to measure solar radiation.
-
Campbell-Stokes recorder
- A sunshine recorder of the type in which the time scale is supplied by the
motion of the sun. It consists essentially of a spherical lens which burns an
image of the sun upon a specially prepared card.
-
CAMEO
- Computer-Aided Management of Emergency Operations. A system of software
applications used to plan for and respond to chemical emergencies. Developed
by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).
-
Canadian hardness-gauge
- A type of disk hardness-gauge, especially useful in relatively soft snow.
See disk hardness gauge.
-
Candela
- Unit of luminous intensity. One candela is one lumen per
steradian.
Formerly called the candle.
-
Candle
- A unit of luminous intensity of a light source. See candela.
-
Candlepower
- Luminous intensity expressed in candelas.
-
Capillary collector
- An instrument for collecting liquid water from the atmosphere.
-
Captive balloon
- A buoyant balloon kept from rising freely by means of a line secured to a
point on the ground, as opposed to a free balloon. See kytoon.
-
Carbon-film hygrometer element
- An electrical hygrometer element constructed of a plastic strip coated
with a film of carbon black dispersed in a hygroscopic binder. Variations in
atmospheric moisture content vary the volume of the binder and thus change the
resistance of the carbon coating. This element is characterized by high
sensitivity and rapid response.
-
Cardinal winds
- Winds from the four cardinal points of the compass; that is, north, east,
south, and west winds.
-
Carrier frequency
- The frequency of a carrier wave.
-
Carrier wave
- Transmitted energy which is modulated in order to carry information.
Usually, it is in the form of a radio-frequency sine wave, modulated either in
amplitude or in frequency.
-
Carry-over
- The portion of the streamflow during any month or year derived from
precipitation in previous months or years.
-
Catch
- The amount of precipitation captured by a rain gauge.
-
Ceiling
- The height ascribed to the lowest layer of clouds or obscuring phenomena
when it is reported as broken, overcast, or obscuration and not classified as
"thin" or "partial." The ceiling is termed unlimited when these conditions are
not satisfied.
-
Ceiling balloon
- A small balloon used to determine the height of the cloud base. The height
can be computed from the ascent velocity of the balloon and the time required
for its disappearance into the cloud.
- Ceiling classification
- A description or explanation of the manner in which the height of the
ceiling is determined, i.e. aircraft ceiling, balloon ceiling, estimated
ceiling, indefinite ceiling, measured ceiling, precipitation ceiling.
- Ceiling light
- A type of cloud height indicator which uses a searchlight to project
vertically a narrow beam of light onto the cloud base. The height of the cloud
is determined using a clinometer, located at a known distance from the ceiling
light, to measure the angle included by the illuminated spot on the cloud, the
observer, and the ceiling light.
- Ceiling projector
- Same as ceiling light.
- Ceilometer
- An automatic, recording cloud height indicator.
-
Celsius temperature scale
- International thermometric scale on which the freezing point of water
equals 0° and the boiling point equals 100° at standard atmospheric pressure
(760 mm Hg). Named for Swedish astronomer Anders Celsius (1701-1744), who
devised the system in 1742.
-
Centibar
- The pressure unit of the meter-ton-second system of physical units, equal
to 10 millibars or 104 dynes per cm².
-
Centigrade temperature scale
- The older name for the Celsius temperature scale. Officially abandoned by
international agreement in 1948, but still in common use.
-
Centimeter-gram-second system
- A system of physical units based on the use of the centimeter, gram, and
the second as elementary quantities of length, mass, and time.
-
Channel storage
- The water volume within a specified portion of a stream channel.
-
Character
- Part of a computer word that has meaning in itself; often, a byte.
-
Chronograph
- A clock-driven device for recording the time of occurrence of an event or
the time interval between the occurrence of events.
-
Chronometric radiosonde
- A radiosonde whose carrier wave is switched on and off in such a manner
that the interval of time between the transmission of signals if a function of
the magnitude of the meteorological elements being measured.
-
Chronothermometer
- A thermometer consisting of a clock mechanism the speed of which is a
function of temperature.
-
Cistern barometer
- A mercury barometer in which the lower mercury surface is larger in area
than the upper surface. The basic construction of a cistern barometer is as
follows: A glass tube one meter in length, sealed at one end, is filled with
mercury, and then inverted. The tube is mounted so that its mount penetrates
the upper surface of a reservoir of mercury called the cistern of the
barometer. See Fortin barometer, Kew barometer.
-
Class A pan
- See evaporation pan.
-
Clay atmometer
- An atmometer consisting of a porous porcelain or ceramic container
connected to a calibrated reservoir filled with distilled water. Evaporation
is determined by the depletion of water in the reservoir.
-
Clear-air turbulence
- Turbulence encountered by aircraft when flying through air space devoid of
clouds. Thermals and wind shear are the main causes.
-
Clinometer
- An instrument for measuring angles of inclination. Used in conjunction
with a ceiling light to measure cloud height at night.
-
Cloud
- A hydrometeor consisting of a visible aggregate of minute water and/or ice
particles in the atmosphere above the earth's surface. Cloud differs from fog
only in that the latter is, by definition, in contact with the earth's
surface.
-
Cloud base
- For a given cloud or cloud layer, the lowest level in the atmosphere at
which the air contains a perceptible quantity of cloud particles.
-
Cloud height
- The height of the cloud base above the local terrain.
-
Cloudburst
- Any sudden and heavy rain, almost always of the shower type.
-
CMOS
- Complementary Metal-Oxide Semiconductor. A method of making silicon chips
that results in low power consumption by the circuits.
-
Coalescence
- Formation of a single water drop by the union of two or more colliding
drops.
-
Cockeyed bob
- A colloquial term in western Australia for a squall, associated with
thunder, on the northwest coast in summer.
-
Code-sending radiosonde
- A radiosonde which transmits the indication of the meteorological sensing
elements in the form of a code consisting of combinations of dots and dashes.
-
Collector
- A class of instruments employed to determine the electric potential at a
point in the atmosphere, and ultimately the atmospheric electric field.
-
Color temperature
- An estimate of the temperature of an incandescent body, determined by
observing the wavelength at which it is emitting with peak intensity (its
color) and using that wavelength in Wien's law.
-
Combined error
- The total of all deviations of a transducer's output from a specified
straight line in a constant environment.
-
Comb nephoscope
- A direct-vision nephoscope which is constructed in the following manner: a
comb consisting of a cross-piece containing equispaced vertical rods is
attached to one end of a column eight to ten feet long and is supported on a
mounting that is free to rotate about its vertical axis. In use, the comb is
turned so that the cloud appears to move parallel to the tips of the vertical
rods.
-
Commutator
- See radiosonde commutator.
-
Condenser-discharge anemometer
- A contact anemometer connected to an electrical circuit which is so
arranged that the average wind speed is indicated.
-
Conductivity
- A unit measure of electrical conduction. The facility with which a
substance conducts electricity, as represented by the current density per unit
electrical-potential gradient in the direction of flow. Electrical
conductivity is the reciprocal of electrical resistivity and is expressed in
units such as mhos (reciprocal ohms) per cm. It is an intrinsic property of a
given type of material under given physical conditions (dependent mostly on
temperature). Conductance, on the other hand, varies with the dimensions of
the conducting system and is the reciprocal of the electrical resistance.
-
Compass points
- The cardinal points of the compass, i.e. north, south, east, west.
-
Compensated pyrheliometer
- Pyrheliometer based on the comparison of the heating of two identical
metal strips, one exposed to radiation, the other to a joule effect.
-
Condensation
- The process by which a vapor becomes a liquid. In meteorology, it occurs
when water vapor changes to dew, fog, or becomes a cloud.
-
Condensation nucleus
- Small particle on which water vapor condenses.
-
Conformal coating
- A protective coating applied to circuits.
-
Constant-level balloon
- A balloon designed to float at a constant pressure level. This may be
accomplished by a pressure valve which controls the release of ballast so as
to maintain flight above a selected pressure level until the supply of ballast
is exhausted. See Moby Dick balloon, skyhook balloon, transosonde.
-
Constant-pressure balloon
- Same as constant-level balloon.
-
Contact anemometer
- Anemometer which generates an electrical contact output with a frequency
proportional to wind speed.
-
Contact-cup anemometer
- Same as contact anemometer.
-
Cooling-power anemometer
- The general term for anemometers operating on the principle that the heat
transfer to air from an object at an elevated temperature is a function of the
air speed. Examples are the hot-wire anemometer and the katathermometer.
-
Coriolis force
- In meteorology, a deflecting force acting on a body in motion and
resulting from the earth's rotation. It deflects air currents to the right in
the northern hemisphere and to the left in the southern hemisphere, thus
having an effect on wind direction.
-
Coronagraph
- An instrument for photographing the corona and prominences of the sun at
times other than at solar eclipse.
-
Cotton-region shelter
- A medium-sized instrument shelter. It is a white louvered box with a flat
double roof and is mounted four feet above the ground on a four-legged stand.
-
Counterradiation
- The downward flux of atmospheric radiation passing through a given level
surface, usually taken as the earth's surface. This result of infrared
(long-wave) absorption and re-emission by the atmosphere is the principal
factor in the greenhouse effect.
-
CPU
- Central Processing Unit. The part of a computer which controls and directs
all functions.
-
Creeping
- Defect in the action of an aneroid barometer resulting in a sluggish
adjustment of the index toward the correct reading when the barometer is
subjected to a large and rapid change in pressure.
-
Crosswind
- A wind blowing in a direction perpendicular to the course of a moving
object.
-
CRT
- Cathode Ray Tube. A display element, consisting of a vacuum tube and
screen, used with computers.
-
Cryopedometer
- Instrument for measuring the depth to which the soil is frozen.
-
Cup anemometer
- Anemometer which measures wind speed by the speed of rotation of 3 or 4
hemispherical or conical cups, each fixed to the end of a horizontal arm
projecting from a vertical axis. See condenser-discharge anemometer, contact
anemometer. Compare to bridled-cup anemometer.
-
Current meter
- Any one of numerous devices for the measurement of either speed alone or
of both direction and speed (set and drift) in flowing water.
-
Cyanometer
- Generally, an instrument designed to measure or estimate the blueness of
the sky. See Linke-scale.
-
Cyclone
- An area of low atmospheric pressure which has a closed circulation that is
cyclonic (counterclockwise in northern hemisphere and clockwise in southern
hemisphere).
|
|