Baro
Baro
You want to know about wind and rain, but weather forecasters talk about
isobars and fronts. This is because isobars and fronts are easier to draw and follow.
Isobars are those lines on a weather map joining together places with the same surface
pressure. The shape of the isobars describes the weather pattern, so changes in the
weather can be forecast by tracking the changing isobar pattern or by observing pressure
change.
Pascals
Most barometers measure pressure in hectoPascals (hPa). These may sometimes also
be called millibars. A hectoPascal is one hundred Pascals, and a Pascal is the metric unit
for pressure, named to recall an experiment done under the direction of Blaise Pascal in
September 1648 that used a barometer to show how pressure changed with height. This
experiment was historically important for it showed the limitations of Aristotelian
philosophy and showed how thinking and experimenting can win out over simply modifying
an explanation (see http://www.strange-loops.com/scibarometer.html).
Other common pressure units are inches and millimetres of mercury. They refer to the
height of mercury which can be supported by the air pressure. To convert a pressure
reading from hectoPascals to inches divide the hectoPascals by 33.86. And to convert
from hectoPascals to millimetres multiply the hectoPascals by 0.75.
Types of barometers
Your barometer is most likely an aneroid (= without fluid) or digital (using a pressure
transducer) type.
Aneroid Barometers
Inside there is a metal call only
partially filled with air. The size
of this airtight cell varies with
changes in the surrounding air
pressure, and these variations
are passed on to an indicator
needle by a series of levers. It is
all mechanical, so no batteries
are
needed.
chamber
If
cracks
the
metal
then
the
Digital Barometers
These have the advantage that they can display a graph
of recent pressure change and the disadvantage that
they require batteries and do not have the words such
as stormy written on their face. Some may give a read
out to the nearest tenth of hectoPascal, but their
accuracy is usually to within one hectoPascal.
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If the measuring needle goes to the left then there has been a drop in pressure
recently. Most digital barometers also indicate if the pressure is rising or falling.
changes in pressure.
observations. Then tweak your barometer to read this value. For aneroid barometers
there is normally an adjustment screw found at the back of the barometer. Try to do these
adjustments at a time when the pressure is not changing much and is neither very high
nor very low (say about 10 am or 4pm, with no fronts coming).
Your barometer may slowly drift out of adjustment so check it every six months or so. You
also need to do this adjustment whenever you change the height location of the barometer
by more than about 5 metres (15 feet).
Setting a Barometer
The main use for a barometer is not so much to read pressure,
but to measure CHANGES in pressure over time.
Digital
The
maybe there has been an increase in the moisture or cloudiness in the air (YES- damp
air weighs less than dry air!).
maybe there has been a decrease in the amount of air above (this happens when rising
air is removed by strong winds aloft faster than it can be replaced)
maybe it is just the time of the day (this is called diurnal pressure change)
As a rule of thumb,
a sustained DROP in pressure is a sign of more chance of rain
a sustained RISE in pressure is a sign of less chance of rain
If the pressure is changing rapidly this suggests that an approaching weather system is
moving quickly or becoming more intense. In this case isobars are moving quickly across
your area and are possibly getting closer together. This usually results in strong winds,
and can be taken as a STRONG WIND WARNING. But sometimes the isobars in your
area may not change position much even though they are close together, in which case
you may have strong winds and only small pressure changes.
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Diurnal
FALL
Steady
Diurnal
RISE
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The amount of this diurnal change is more in the tropics (about 3 hPa per tide) than over
New Zealand (about 1 hPa).
calculations is to read your barometer at the SAME TIME of the day, preferably at about
10 or 4 (am or pm NZST).
Barograph from Darwin for a month showing the daily ups and downs of the pressure.
Your barometer as an alarm-clock
Your adjusted barometer can be used along with a weather map to help monitor the
progress of something such as an approaching wind change.
The latest weather map is available from www.metservice.com.
The map on the right above is a forecast for a time twelve hours later than the map on the
left. The map on the left shows the pressure at Invercargill to be 1019. The map on the
right shows a cold front having crossed Invercargill bringing a southerly change and
raising the pressure to 1023. Eyeballing the cold front it looks as though the part of it that
is approaching Invercargill has a pressure reading of around 1021.
The weather
sequence will follow that given in the weather map, but the timing may change. Adjust the
movable setting hand of your aneroid barometer to be at this 1021 target pressure value,
and then you need only glance at the barometer later to monitor the approaching front and
wind change. It needs to be mentioned though that this is only a rough alarm clock and
can easily be three hours out. The isobars on a weather map are just smoothed out
estimates and should not be taken to be exact.
help you avoid any messy and unnecessary confrontations with the unruly elements.
Weather Foretelling
Once your barometer has been adjusted (to read Mean Sea Level Pressure) it can be
used for weather forecasting. Some digital barometers display a weather forecast based
on how the pressure is changing (sometimes augmented by temperature change). The
following scheme uses the pressure reading and its trend as well use some wind direction
observations.
and do not take into account the modifying effects on land. . They should be reasonably
OK for the west coast and northern part of New Zealand, and least reliable for eastern or
central New Zealand. These forecasts should be used as guidance only, and will NOT be
as accurate as the latest available weather forecast.
WIND
WEATHER FORECAST
S, SW
W, NW
N, NE
Fair Weather
E, SE
Rain/showers at first,
Diminishing over next 18 hours,
Cooler; winds decreasing.
1010-1015
SW, W, NW
(rapid rise)
(normal rise)
SW
(normal rise)
W, NW
(slow rise)
NW, N
(normal rise)
N, NE
Fair
E, SE
S, SW
W, NW
N, NE
Clearing
E, SE
WIND
WEATHER FORECAST
S, SW
W, NW
N, NE
E, SE
SW, W, NW
SW
W, NW
NE
1010-1015
1000-1010
1000-1015
S, SW
W, NW
N, NE
E, SE
WIND
WEATHER FORECAST
SW, W
NW
N, NE
1010-1015
SE, S
N, NE
(slow fall)
(rapid fall)
N, NE
Strengthening winds
Rain in 9-15 hours, or continued rain
(slow fall)
(rapid fall)
(slow fall)
SE
(rapid fall)
SE
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WIND
WEATHER FORECAST
1000-1010
SW
NW
N, NE
wind increasing,
rising minimum temperatures by 3-5 C.
SE, S
SW, W
NW, N
NE, E
SE, S
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