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American Meteorological Society
Industri: Weather
Number of terms: 60695
Number of blossaries: 0
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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, ...
1. See hurricane. 2. (Rare. ) A waterspout. (Shakespeare, W. , King Lear, Act III, Scene 2; in the First Folio, spelled hyrricano. )
Industry:Weather
1. See frost mound. 2. See icing.
Industry:Weather
1. Same as thermal conductivity. 2. Less frequently, same as thermometric conductivity.
Industry:Weather
1. Reasoning from particular instances to general conclusions; not logically valid. Compare abduction, deduction. 2. See magnetic induction.
Industry:Weather
1. Pertaining to a marked ability to accelerate the condensation of water vapor; in general usage, the ability of a crystalline solid, (salt, brown sugar) to absorb vapor but at such a low rate under most conditions that it does not dissolve completely. In meteorology, this term is applied principally to those condensation nuclei composed of salts that yield aqueous solutions of a very low equilibrium vapor pressure compared with that of pure water at the same temperature. Condensation on hygroscopic nuclei may begin at a relative humidity much lower than 100% (about 76% for sodium chloride); below this value particles remain dry. There is often a hysteresis such that particles remain liquid as the relative humidity falls and are present as a supersaturated solution. On so-called nonhygroscopic nuclei, which merely furnish sufficiently large (by molecular standards) wettable surfaces, relative humidity of nearly 100% is required to cause condensation. “Damp haze” is formed of hygroscopic particles in the process of slow growth in relatively dry air as it cools. 2. Descriptive of a substance, the physical characteristics of which are appreciably altered by effects of water vapor. The hygroscopicity of certain materials has been advantageously utilized in humidity measurement and control devices, for example, the hair element of a hair hygrometer.
Industry:Weather
1. Of equal or constant salinity. 2. A line on a chart connecting all points of equal salinity; an isopleth of salinity.
Industry:Weather
A line of equal or constant density. It is equivalent to an isostere.
Industry:Weather
1. Measurement and computation of streamflow. 2. Techniques and instrumentation for the measurement and analysis of water. 3. The science of the determination of the specific gravity of a liquid.
Industry:Weather
1. In general, expresses the rate of transfer per unit area of some condition or physical quantity, such as rainfall, electromagnetic energy, sound, etc. 2. (Or radiant intensity. ) Radiant power per unit solid angle; in SI units, W sr−1. 3. In synoptic meteorology, the general strength of flow around an individual cyclone or anticyclone (most often applied to the former). This concept is commonly used in terms of a process, “intensification,” or descriptively, as an “intense low. ”
Industry:Weather
1. In general, any deposit or coating of ice on an object, caused by the impingement and freezing of liquid (usually supercooled) hydrometeors; to be distinguished from hoarfrost in that the latter results from the deposition of water vapor. The two basic types of icing are rime and glaze. See aircraft icing, carburetor icing. 2. (Also known as flood icing, flooding ice, aufeis (German), naled (Russian). ) A mass or sheet of ice formed during the winter by successive freezing of sheets of water that may seep from the ground, from a river, or from a spring.
Industry:Weather