- Industry: Weather
- Number of terms: 60695
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The American Meteorological Society promotes the development and dissemination of information and education on the atmospheric and related oceanic and hydrologic sciences and the advancement of their professional applications. Founded in 1919, AMS has a membership of more than 14,000 professionals, ...
The lowest order solution to the equation for equatorial waves. See mixed Rossby–gravity wave.
Industry:Weather
A received radio signal (or radar echo) with power just above the noise level of the receiver. Compare saturation signal.
Industry:Weather
An atmospheric optical phenomenon in which the observer appears to be engulfed in a uniformly white glow. Neither shadows, horizon, nor clouds are discernible; sense of depth and orientation is lost; only very dark, nearby objects can be seen. Whiteout occurs over an unbroken snow cover and beneath a uniformly overcast sky, when, with the aid of the snow blink effect, the light from the sky is about equal to that from the snow surface. Blowing snow may be an additional cause. This phenomenon is experienced in the air as well as on the ground.
Industry:Weather
An atmospheric optical phenomenon in which the observer appears to be engulfed in a uniformly white glow. Neither shadows, horizon, nor clouds are discernible; sense of depth and orientation is lost; only very dark, nearby objects can be seen. Whiteout occurs over an unbroken snow cover and beneath a uniformly overcast sky, when, with the aid of the snow blink effect, the light from the sky is about equal to that from the snow surface. Blowing snow may be an additional cause. This phenomenon is experienced in the air as well as on the ground.
Industry:Weather
Generally, the time required for an instrument to indicate a given percentage of the final reading resulting from an input signal; the relaxation time of an instrument. In the general case for instruments such as thermometers, with responses exponential in character to step changes in an applied signal, the time constant is equal to the time required for the instrument to indicate 63. 2% of the total change, that is, the time to respond to all but 1/''e'' of the original signal change.
Industry:Weather
Generally, the time required for an instrument to indicate a given percentage of the final reading resulting from an input signal; the relaxation time of an instrument. In the general case for instruments such as thermometers, with responses exponential in character to step changes in an applied signal, the time constant is equal to the time required for the instrument to indicate 63. 2% of the total change, that is, the time to respond to all but 1/''e'' of the original signal change.
Industry:Weather
The transport of mass motion momentum solely by the random motions of individual molecules not moving together in coherent groups. Viscosity is a consequence of gradients in velocity fields in fluids. Sometimes described as fluid friction because velocity gradients in fluids are damped as a consequence of viscosity. See viscous force, stress tensor, dynamic viscosity, kinematic viscosity, Newtonian friction law, Navier– Stokes equations, eddy viscosity.
Industry:Weather
Two parallel rows of alternately placed vortices along the wake of an obstacle in a fluid of moderate Reynolds number. Fluid drag can be calculated from the motion of these vortices, which are stable only for a certain ratio of the width of the street to the distance between vortices along the street. See vortex cloud street.
Industry:Weather
The transport of mass motion momentum solely by the random motions of individual molecules not moving together in coherent groups. Viscosity is a consequence of gradients in velocity fields in fluids. Sometimes described as fluid friction because velocity gradients in fluids are damped as a consequence of viscosity. See viscous force, stress tensor, dynamic viscosity, kinematic viscosity, Newtonian friction law, Navier– Stokes equations, eddy viscosity.
Industry:Weather
The liquid water present within a sample of snow (or soil), usually expressed in percent by weight. The water content in percent of water equivalent is 100 minus the quality of snow. Compare snow density.
Industry:Weather