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Geography · The natural environment

Weather

CIE 04602 min read

Key definitions

Weather — the day-to-day, hour-to-hour changes in our atmosphere.

Climate — the average weather patterns of an area over 30 or more years (limited to temperature and precipitation).


Weather instruments

InstrumentWhat it measures / how to read it
AnemometerWind speed. Electronic reading produced.
BarometerAir pressure. Read the hands of the barometer.
Wind vaneWind direction. The arrow points in the direction the wind is coming FROM.
HygrometerHumidity. Read the wet bulb and dry bulb readings, then compare the readings to a humidity chart.
Maximum and minimum thermometerHighest and lowest temperature of an area. The left thermometer is minimum, the right thermometer is maximum.
Rain gaugePrecipitation.

Stevenson screen

Stevenson screen — contains various weather instruments to measure the weather.

  • Has a roof which prevents rain and direct heat
  • Away from buildings, trees and artificial sources of heat
  • On level ground
  • Painted white to reflect sunlight
  • Stands on legs, at least 125 cm from the ground
  • Has hinged doors
  • Faces away from the sun to avoid direct sunlight
  • Sited on grass to make sure there is no excess heat (e.g. from concrete)
  • Surrounded by a security fence to avoid damage from animals
  • Sides have wooden slats to allow air flow

Clouds

Main types:

  • Stratus — greyish and often cover the entire sky. Usually no precipitation (may drizzle).
  • Cumulus — puffy and large clouds. Flat base and only around 1000 m above ground. Can develop to form giant cumulonimbus thunder clouds.
  • Cirrus — wispy and thin. Very high altitude (6000 m) and usually mean pleasant and fair weather.

Types of clouds:

  1. Cumulus
  2. Stratus
  3. Cirrus
  4. Cumulonimbus
  5. Altostratus
  6. Nimbostratus

Observing cloud cover in the sky

  • Estimated using oktas
  • Scale of 0 (least cloud coverage) to 8 (most cloud coverage)
  • Example: an estimated 4 okta sky is partly cloudy

Displaying weather data

  • Isotherm — a line drawn on a map to join places of equal temperature.
  • Isohyet — a line drawn on a map to join areas of equal rainfall.
  • Isobar — a line drawn on a map to join areas of equal pressure.

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