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3.1: Measurements

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    40882
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    Measuring Air Temperature

    Before we can analyze air temperature measurements from around the world, a set of rules must govern how air temperature is measured. These rules establish uniformity among weather stations, enabling the accurate comparison and analysis of air temperatures worldwide. Let’s cover these rules:

    1. Temperatures near the ground vary wildly over a 24-hour day because the ground is the first surface to receive heat during the daytime, and the first to lose heat at night. Thus, a thermometer needs to be placed approximately 1.5-2 meters above the ground (at eye level).
    2. Solar radiation is powerful and warms up everything it touches, including your face, the ground… and a thermometer. In fact, by warming a thermometer, solar radiation could lead to an inaccurately high temperature. Thus, a thermometer needs to be placed in the shade.
    3. However, in the open, numerous factors can “contaminate” the thermometer reading, making it less accurate. For instance, dust, pollen, moisture, and other substances can come into contact with the thermometer. To prevent these things from interfering with the thermometer reading, the thermometer should be placed in a shelter.
    4. However, a completely enclosed shelter will cause heat to build up inside the shelter, resulting in a thermometer reading different from the open-air temperature. Thus, the shelter in which we house the thermometer must be well-ventilated.

    To recap, air temperature must be measured at 1.5-2 meters above the ground, in a shaded, but well-ventilated shelter. In the U.S., this type of shelter is known as the Cotton Region Shelter (Figure \(\PageIndex{1}\)). With this information, let's try to answer the following question.

    White louvered weather shelter on metal legs, used to protect meteorological instruments outdoors.
    Figure \(\PageIndex{1}\): A Cotton Region Shelter, also known as a Stevenson screen, is a standard housing unit for meteorological instruments. (CC BY-SA 3.0; Famartin via Wikimedia Commons)
    1. Suppose you and a friend went outside to measure the temperature, and your friend held the thermometer by gripping the bulb, up to eye level, while in the shade. Would your friend’s measurement be accurate or not? Why or why not?


    3.1: Measurements is shared under a CC BY 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.