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A unit of luminance (or brightness) equal to 1/6 candles per square centimeter.
A unit of energy per unit area commonly employed in radiation theory. Equal to one gram-calorie per square centimeter.
A curve showing the variation of temperature with height in the free air. See lapse rate.
The decrease of an atmospheric variable with height, the variable being temperature, unless otherwise specified.
See calorie.
A common type of terrestrial scintillation; shimmering over a hot surface (such as a roadway) on a quiet, cloudless. summer day.
A wave disturbance in airflow due to some barrier in the flow. i.e. a hill or mountain.
Facing away from the wind.
Light Detecting And Ranging. A technique used to detect atmospheric constituents or related parameters such as atmospheric extinction coefficient. Light is produced in a modulated source and the resulting backscattered or reflected light is analyzed to quantify some property of the atmosphere.
Visible radiation (about 0.4 to 0.7 microns in wavelength) considered in terms of its luminous efficiency, that is, evaluated in proportion to its ability to stimulate the sense of sight.
Wind with a speed between 1 and 3 knots (1 and 3 mph); Beaufort scale number 1.
Wind with a speed between 4 and 6 knots (4 and 7 mph), Beaufort scale number 2.
The maximum deviation of any points from a straight line drawn as a "best fit" through the calibration points of an instrument with a linear response curve. Usually expressed as a percentage of full- scale range.
A type of cyanometer. an instrument used to measure the blueness of the sky. The Linke-scale is simply a set of eight cards of different standardized shades of blue. They are evenly numbered 2 to 26. The odd numbers are used by the observer if he or she judges the sky color to lie between any of the given shades.
Thermometer in which the difference in the rates of expansion with temperature of a liquid and its receptacle is used as a measure of the temperature. The liquid used may be ethyl alcohol, toluene, petroleum, or mercury.
The general term for dry atmospheric suspensoids, including dust, haze, smoke. and sand. Compare to hydrometeor.
The outer, solid portion of the earth: the crust of the earth.
A clay atmometer consisting of a hollow ceramic sphere through which evaporation occurs. Evaporation is measured by the loss of water from the reservoir which feeds the sphere.
A balloon having a detachable tail which is released when the balloon has undergone a predetermined expansion. It thus serves to measure approximately the density of the atmosphere at the point of release.
The meteorological visual range, which can be estimated from the average extinction coefficient using the Koschmieder equation.
Winds which, over a small area, differ from those which would be appropriate to the general pressure distribution.
Radiation with wavelengths greater than 4 microns. (In meteorology, same as infrared radiation.)
The audio-frequency signal transmitted by the Diamond-Hinman radiosonde when the baroswitch pen passes each fifth contact of the commutator up to a number determined by the design of the commutator. It then signals every contact except the fifth, which is transmitted as a hi-reference signal.
An area of low barometric pressure, with its attendant system of winds. Also called a depression or cyclone.
A local variation in the wind direction or speed. This condition can present danger to aircraft, especially at landing, when a sudden shift from headwind to tailwind can cause a rapid loss of airspeed and lift.
Instrument for measuring the mean intensity of glo global solar radiation (direct and diffuse) near the earth's surface in a specified time interval.
A momentary decrease in the speed of the wind.
A unit of luminous flux. The lumen is equal to the luminous flux radiated into a unit solid angle (steradian) from a small source having a luminous intensity of one candle. An ideal source possessing an intensity of one candle in every direction would radiate a total of 46 lumens.
A measure of the intrinsic luminous intensity emitted by a source in a given direction. Luminance is a measure only of light. The comparable term for electromagnetic radiation in general is radiance.
Any emission of light at temperatures below that required for incandescence.
The flux of visible radiation, so weighted as to account for the manner in which the response of the human eye varies with the Wavelength of radiation. The basic unit for luminous flux is the lumen,
The intensity (flux per unit solid angle) of visible radiation weighted to take into account the variable response of the human eye as a function of the wavelength of light. Usually expressed in candles.
A photometric unit of illuminance or illumination equal to one lumen per square meter.
Acknowledgments
Our thanks to the NovaLynx Corporation for the use of their glossary.