radiosonde$66537$ - translation to spanish
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radiosonde$66537$ - translation to spanish

METEOROLOGICAL INSTRUMENTATION
Rawinsonde; Radiosondes; Rawinsondes; Radio-sonde; Radiosonde data; Ozone sonde; Radiosonde set; Radio-wid system; Radiosonde system; Balloon sonde; Meteorological aids service
  • US sailors launching a radiosonde during World War 2
  • Kites used to fly a meteograph
  • Meteograph used by the US Weather Bureau in 1898
  • Modern radiosondes showing progress of miniaturisation
  • U.S. Bureau of Standards personnel launch radiosonde near Washington, DC in 1936

radiosonde      
n. radiosonda

Definition

radiosonde
['re?d????s?nd]
¦ noun dated an instrument carried by balloon or other means and transmitting information about the atmosphere by radio.
Origin
1930s: from radio- + Ger. Sonde 'probe'.

Wikipedia

Radiosonde

A radiosonde is a battery-powered telemetry instrument carried into the atmosphere usually by a weather balloon that measures various atmospheric parameters and transmits them by radio to a ground receiver. Modern radiosondes measure or calculate the following variables: altitude, pressure, temperature, relative humidity, wind (both wind speed and wind direction), cosmic ray readings at high altitude and geographical position (latitude/longitude). Radiosondes measuring ozone concentration are known as ozonesondes.

Radiosondes may operate at a radio frequency of 403 MHz or 1680 MHz. A radiosonde whose position is tracked as it ascends to give wind speed and direction information is called a rawinsonde ("radar wind -sonde"). Most radiosondes have radar reflectors and are technically rawinsondes. A radiosonde that is dropped from an airplane and falls, rather than being carried by a balloon is called a dropsonde. Radiosondes are an essential source of meteorological data, and hundreds are launched all over the world daily.