
A technician examines a weather station's anemometer.
A 'weather station' is a facility with instruments and equipment to make observations of
atmospheric conditions in order to provide information to make
weather forecasts and to study the
weather and
climate.
Typical weather stations have the following instruments:
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Thermometer for measuring
temperature
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Barometer for measuring
barometric pressure
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Hygrometer for measuring
humidity
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Anemometer for measuring
wind speed
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Wind vane for measuring
wind direction
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Rain gauge for measuring
precipitation
Except for those instruments requiring direct exposure to the elements (
anemometer,
rain gauge), the instruments should be sheltered in a vented box, usually a
Stevenson screen, to keep direct sunlight off the
thermometer and wind off the
hygrometer. The instrumentation may be specialized to allow for periodic recording otherwise significant manual labour is required for record keeping. Automatic transmission of data, in a format such as
METAR, is also desirable as many weather station's data is required for
weather forecasting.
Daily observation times
Historically readings were taken by weather observers who were typically not paid and performed the duty as part of their permanent jobs (e.g.,
postmaster). These weather readings were taken between 7 and 9 a.m. local time daily as unpaid observers were unwilling to take readings from midnight to midnight. Since the advent of
automatic weather stations, these time intervals occasionally remain as a part of tradition when reporting daily to outside organizations.
See also
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Anemometer
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Automatic weather station
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Barometer
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Hygrometer
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Rain gauge
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Thermometer
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Weather ship
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Wind vane
External links
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International Weather Watchers Observer Handbook (PDF 768KB 45 pages)
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Association of American Weather Observers
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Citizen Weather Observer Program
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CWOP Weather Station Siting, Performance, and Data Quality Guide (PDF 800KB 88 pages)
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Weather Stations
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WeatherBug Network Observers
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Initial Guidance to Obtain Representative Meteorological Observations at Urban Sites, by Tim R. Oke (PDF 423KB 51 pages)
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NWS Cooperative Observer Program
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NWS Observing Handbook No. 2: Cooperative Station Observations (PDF 1.4MB 94 pages)
References