S
- Salinometer
- Any device or instrument for measuring salinity, especially one based on
electrical conductivity methods.
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Saturation
- The condition of the atmosphere when the amount of water vapor present is
the maximum possible at the existing temperature.
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Savart polariscope
- A polariscope consisting of a specially constructed double plate polarizer
and a tourmaline plate analyzer. Polarized light passing through the
instrument is indicated by the presence of parallel colored fringes, while
unpolarized light results in a uniform field.
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SAWRS
- Supplemental Aviation Weather Reporting Station. A facility where weather
observations are taken, prepared, and transmitted by a local operator under
federal government supervision.
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SCADA
- Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition. A type of industrial process
control system used for gathering data in real time from remote locations in
order to control equipment and conditions.
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Scale
- The array of indicating marks and figure in relation to which the position
of an index is observed, i.e. a scale plate on a recorder.
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Scatter
- The process by which small particles suspended in a medium of a different
refractive index diffuse a portion of the incident radiation in all
directions. In scattering no energy transformation results, only a change in
the spatial distribution of the radiation. Along with absorption, scattering
is a major cause of the attenuation of radiation by the atmosphere.
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Scattered radiation
- Solar radiation scattered by particles in the atmosphere.
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Scattering coefficient
- A measure of the attenuation due to scattering of light as it traverses a
medium containing scattering particles.
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Scintillation
- Generic term for rapid variations in apparent position, brightness, or
color of a distant luminous object viewed through the atmosphere.
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Scintillometer
- A type of photoelectric photometer used to measure high-altitude winds on
the assumption that stellar scintillation is caused by atmospheric
inhomogeneities being carried along by wind near the tropopause level.
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Scud
- Ragged low clouds, usually stratus fractus. Most often applied when such
clouds are moving rapidly beneath a layer of nimbostratus.
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Sea level pressure
- The atmospheric pressure at mean sea level either directly measured by
stations at sea level or empirically determined from the station pressure and
temperature by stations not at sea level. Used as a common reference for
analyses of surface pressure patterns.
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Sea rainbow
- Same as marine rainbow.
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Sea water thermometer
- A thermometer designed for use in measuring the temperature of sea water.
One form consists of a mercury-in-glass thermometer protected by a perforated
metal case. Another form consists of a mercury-in-glass thermometer surrounded
by a metal case which forms a well around the bulb of the thermometer. When
the thermometer is raised from the water, a sample is retained in the well.
See bucket thermometer, reversing thermometer.
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Secchi disk
- A white disk 12" or more in diameter which is lowered into the sea to
estimate transparency of the water. The depths are noted at which it first
disappears when lowered and reappears when raised.
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Secondary instrument
- An instrument whose calibration is determined by comparison with an
absolute instrument.
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Secondary rainbow
- A rainbow of angular radius of about 50° often seen outside the primary
rainbow of 42° radius. The secondary rainbow is formed by two internal
reflections (rather than one as in the primary rainbow), plus two refractions.
Its spectral color sequence is from red inside to violet outside. Because each
reflection introduces light losses, the secondary bow is much less bright than
the primary bow.
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Seisomograph
- An instrument used to measure and record earthquake vibrations and other
earth tremors.
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Sensing element
- The element directly responsive to the value of the measured variable.
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Sensitivity
- The ratio of the output of an instrument to the input value, i.e. a rain
gauge with a sensitivity of 1 tip per 0.01".
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Sensor
- The part of a measuring instrument which responds directly to changes in
the environment.
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Serial data transmission (serial output)
- A form of data transmission in which the bits of each character are sent
one at a time along a single communication path. Compare to parallel data
transmission.
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Short-wave radiation
- Radiation with wavelengths less than 4 microns.
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Shower
- Precipitation from a cumuliform cloud. Characterized by the suddenness of
beginning and ending, by the rapid change in intensity, and usually by a rapid
change in the condition of the sky. The solid or liquid water particles are
usually bigger than the corresponding elements in other types of
precipitation.
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SIGMET information
- Meteorological information issued by a watch office concerning the
occurrence or forecast of weather phenomena which may affect the safety of
aircraft operations.
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Signal conditioning
- The processing of the form or mode of a signal so as to make it
intelligible to, or compatible with, a given device.
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Significant level
- In a radiosonde observation, a level (other than a standard level) for
which values of pressure, temperature, and humidity are reported because
temperature and/or humidity data at that level is sufficiently important or
unusual to warrant the attention of the forecaster.
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Simplex
- Operation mode of a communication circuit in which one end can only
transmit and the other end can only receive.
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Sine galvanometer
- A magnetometer of the electromagnetic type which is used to measure the
horizontal intensity of the earth's magnetic field.
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Siphon barograph
- A recording siphon barometer.
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Siphon barometer
- A mercury barometer in which the tube is U-shaped and the upper and lower
mercury surfaces have the same diameter.
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Six's thermometer
- A thermometer, invented by James Six in 1782, which simultaneously
indicates the maximum and minimum temperatures attained during a given
interval of time. A U-tube min/max thermometer.
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Sky cover
- The amount of sky covered or concealed by clouds or obscuring phenomena.
It is reported in tenths, so that 0.0 indicates a clear sky and 1.0 (or 10/10)
indicates a completely covered sky. The following classifications are used in
aviation weather observations: clear, scattered, broken, overcast, partial
obscuration, obscuration.
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Skyhook balloon
- A large plastic constant-level balloon for duration flying at very high
altitudes.
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Slant range
- The line-of-sight distance between two objects.
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Sleet
- Frozen or partly frozen rain.
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Sling psychrometer
- Psychrometer to which a small chain or rotary handle is attached so that
the observer can rotate the instrument rapidly to properly ventilate the
thermometer bulbs.
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Snow
- Precipitation composed of white or translucent ice crystals, chiefly in
complex branched hexagonal forms.
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Snow board
- A flat, solid, white material, such as painted plywood, approximately two
feet square, which is laid on the ground or snow surface to obtain more
accurate measurements of snowfall and water content.
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Snow bridging
- An effect noted primarily in wet snow conditions when snow clings to the
sides of a precipitation gauge and gradually accumulates until the gauge
orifice is capped with accumulated snow. This effect can be minimized by using
large collectors, and wind screens around gauges.
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Snow core
- A sample of either freshly fallen snow, or the combined old and new snow
on the ground. obtained by pushing a cylinder down through the snow layer and
extracting it.
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Snow flurry
- Snow shower, particularly of a very light and brief nature.
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Snow gauge
- Apparatus designed to measure the amount of precipitation falling in the
form of snow. The device determines the weight of the snow or the volume of
water after the snow melts.
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Snow grains
- Precipitation of very small, white, opaque particles of ice, fairly flat
or elongated, with diameters less than 1 mm. The solid equivalent of drizzle.
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Snow pellets (soft hail)
- Precipitation of white, opaque, spherical or conical ice particles that
are crisp and easily crushed and that have diameters of 2 to 5 mm.
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Snow pillow
- An instrument used to measure snow water equivalents. Snow pillows
typically have flat stainless steel surface areas. The pillow below this flat
surface is filled with antifreeze solution and the pressure in the pillow is
related to the water-equivalent depth of the snow on the platform.
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Snow sampler
- Snow gauge composed of a metal cylinder, closed at one end, used to obtain
a sample of snow from which the water is measured after melting.
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Snow stake
- Graduated fixed stake used in regions of abundant snowfall to facilitate
the measurement of snow depth.
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Snow stick
- A portable rod used to measure snow depth.
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SNOTEL
- SNOw TELemetry. An automated network of snowpack data collection sites.
The Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS), formerly the Soil
Conservation Service (SCS), has operated the Federal-State-Private Cooperative
Snow Survey Program in the western United States since 1935. A standard SNOTEL
site consists of a snow pillow, a storage type precipitation gauge, an air
temperature sensor, and a small shelter for housing electronics.
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Snow survey
- Determination of the total amount of snow covering a watershed or a given
region. Both depth and water content of the snow may be measured, and the
results may be used to predict the amount of water that will be available
after melting.
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Software
- The programs and instructions which direct a computer.
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Soil evaporimeter
- Instrument used to measure the amount of water evaporated from the soil
surface during a given time interval.
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Soil moisture
- Moisture contained in the soil above the water table, including water
vapor which is present in the soil pores. In some cases this term refers
strictly to the humidity contained in the root zone of plants.
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Soil thermometer (geothermometer)
- Thermometer for measuring the temperature in the soil at different depths.
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Solar constant
- Amount of solar radiation incident, per unit area and time, on a surface
which is perpendicular to the radiation and is situated at the outer limit of
the atmosphere, the earth being at its mean distance from the sun. It equals
approximately 2.00 ly/min (1400 W/m2).
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Solarimeter
- Name sometimes used in place of pyranometer as a generic term.
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Solar radiation
- The total electromagnetic radiation emitted by the sun. About 99.9 percent
of its energy output falls within the wavelength interval from 0.15 microns to
4.0 microns, with peak intensity near 0.47 microns. About one-half of the
total energy in the solar beam falls in the visible spectrum from 0.4 to 0.7
microns, and most of the other half falls in the near infrared, a small
additional portion falling in the ultraviolet.
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Solar radiation shield
- See radiation shield.
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Solid-state device
- An element that can control current without moving parts, heated
filaments, or vacuum gaps.
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Sonic anemometer
- An anemometer which measures wind speed by means of the properties of
wind-borne sound waves. It operates on the principle that the propagation
velocity of a sound wave in a moving medium is equal to the velocity of sound
with respect to the medium plus the velocity of the medium. The sonic
anemometer is an absolute instrument and has the advantages of a very short
time-constant and an absence of moving mechanical parts.
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Sonic thermometer
- A thermometer based upon the principle that the velocity of a sound wave
is a function of the temperature of the medium through which it passes. Sonic
thermometers possess very short time-constants and eliminate radiation error.
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Sounding
- Same as an upper air observation, but commonly used to refer to a single
complete radiosonde observation.
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Span
- The algebraic difference between the upper and lower limits of the
measuring range of an instrument, i.e. a thermometer with a range of -35 to
50°C has a span of 85°C.
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Specific humidity
- In a system of moist air, the dimensionless ratio of the mass of water
vapor to the total mass of the system.
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Spectral hygrometer
- A hygrometer which determines the amount of precipitable moisture in a
given region of the atmosphere by measuring attenuation of radiant energy
caused by the absorption bands of water vapor.
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Spectral solar radiation
- Solar radiation of selected wavelengths.
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Spectroheliograph
- An instrument for taking photographs of an image of the sun in
monochromatic light.
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Spectrohelioscope
- Similar to the spectroheliograph, but used for visual instead of
photographic purposes.
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Spectrophotometer
- A photometer which measures the intensity of radiation as a function of
the frequency (or wavelength) of the radiation.
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Spectropyreheliometer
- An instrument which measures the spectral distribution of the intensity of
direct solar radiation.
Spirit thermometer
- A liquid-in-glass thermometer which uses an organic substance such as
alcohol as the thermometer liquid. This type of thermometer has a low freezing
point and a high coefficient of expansion. It is less accurate, however, than
a mercury thermometer.
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Splayed tail
- A type of wind vane having a split or V-shaped tail. The apex orients
itself to the direction of the wind.
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Squall
- A strong wind characterized by a sudden onset, a duration on the order of
minutes, and a rather sudden decrease in speed.
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Staff gauge
- A graduated scale placed in a position so that the stage of a stream may
be read directly from it. Staff gauges may be placed on bridge piers or
pilings, etc., or placed on specially constructed supports.
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Stage
- The elevation of the water surface in a stream as measured by a river
gauge with reference to some arbitrarily selected zero datum.
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Standard atmosphere
- A standard unit of atmospheric pressure, defined as the pressure exerted
by a 760 mm column of mercury at standard gravity (980.665 cm/sec2) at 0°C. 1
standard atmosphere is equal to 760 mm Hg, 29.9212 inches Hg, or 1013.250 mb.
Also, a hypothetical vertical distribution of atmospheric temperature,
pressure, and density which, by international agreement, is taken to be
representative of the atmosphere.
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Standard error
- The standard deviation (positive square-root of the variation) of the
errors associated with physical measurements of an unknown quantity, or
statistical estimates of an unknown parameter or of a random variable.
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Standard level (mandatory level)
- One of several constant-pressure levels in the atmosphere for which a
complete evaluation of data derived from upper air observations is required.
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Static pressure vent
- A vent used with pressure sensors to reduce the effect of wind on the
pressure inlet. It is normally mounted remotely and connected to the sensor
using airtight tubing.
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Station pressure
- The atmospheric pressure computed using station elevation as the reference
datum level. Station pressure is usually the base value from which sea level
pressure and altimeter setting are determined.
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Statute mile
- A unit of distance equal to 5280 feet. It is sometimes referred to as a
land mile.
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Stevenson screen
- A type of instrument shelter. It is a wooden box painted white with double
louvered sides and mounted on a stand four feet above the ground.
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Still well (or stilling well)
- A cylinder installed in a body of water or an evaporation pan to hold a
sensor, such as a float to measure water level or a hook gage. The stillwell
is constructed so that there is free movement of water in and out of it, and
it therefore provides a representative sample of the water body. It functions
to protect the sensor in some cases and to provide an undisturbed water
surface in other cases.
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Storm
- Wind with a speed between 56 and 63 knots (64 and 72 mph); Beaufort scale
number 11.
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Stream gauge
- Same as river gauge.
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Strong breeze
- Wind with a speed between 22 and 27 knots (25 and 31 mph); Beaufort scale
number 6.
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Strong gale
- Wind with a speed between 41 and 47 knots (47 and 54 mph); Beaufort scale
number 9.
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Sun dog
- Same as parhelion.
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Sunshine recorder
- An instrument designed to record the duration of sunshine at a given
location without regard to intensity. See Campbell-Stokes recorder, Jordan
sunshine recorder, Marvin sunshine recorder, Pers sunshine recorder.
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Supercooled water
- Liquid water at temperatures colder than freezing.
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Supernumerary rainbows
- A set of weekly colored rainbow arcs sometimes discernable inside a
primary rainbow.
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Super-pressure balloon
- See constant-level balloon.
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Switching power supply
- A power supply which achieves its output regulation by means of one or
more active power handling devices which are alternately placed in the "off"
or "on" states. It is more efficient than linear supplies which vary the
conduction of power devices to achieve output regulation.
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Synchro
- A motorlike device containing a rotor and a stator and capable of
converting an angular position into an electrical signal, or an electrical
signal into an angular position. When several synchros are correctly
connected, all of the rotors will align themselves into the same angular
position. This is useful, since one synchro whose angular motion is forced to
change, can drive another synchro to indicate the angular change.
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Synchronous
- Having a specific relationship to a time base or clock. In synchronous
communications, data characters are sent according to a timing signal which
synchronizes the two communicating devices.
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Synoptic
- In general, pertaining to or affording an overall view. In meteorology,
this term has become somewhat specialized in referring to the use of
meteorological data obtained simultaneously over a wide area for the purpose
of obtaining a comprehensive and nearly instantaneous picture of the state of
the atmosphere. Thus, to a meteorologist, "synoptic" takes on the additional
connotation of simultaneity.
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Synoptic weather observation
- A surface weather observation, made at periodic times, of sky cover, state
of the sky, cloud height, atmospheric pressure reduced to sea level,
temperature, dew point, wind speed and direction, amount of precipitation,
hydrometeors and lithometeors, and special phenomena that prevail at the time
of the observation or have been observed since the previous specified
observation. Compare to aviation weather observation.
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