The most important instrument used for weather forecasting is the barometer, but surprisingly only a handful of people know exactly how to read a barometer and interpret its measurements. A barometer does not only  indicate present weather conditions but forecasts probable weather conditions 12 to 24 hours in advance.However it's not that simple to read a barometer, taking into consideration the fact that the wind changes its direction constantly. A "rise" in barometric pressure must be considered in relation to the former reading and the same principle applies to a "fall". In fact, a barometer is most useful if it is read only once a day, preferably at the same time of the day - 7-8am or 8-9pm are good times to do barometer readings - for reasons which we'll get to later. Twice a day is also fine, but it's really the 24 hour changes which are most significant for weather forecasters, so learning how to read a barometer is of great importance at this point. Sometimes the readings of the barometer can appear inaccurate saying that there is going to be rainy but in fact it's going to be sunny. That happens because the weather we experience is caused by the interaction of air masses and pressure cells, which move fairly slow over the earth's surface. Considering only air pressure varies, the extremes are high pressure cells and low pressure areas are the fronts, these two being the boundaries between different air masses. Between these extremes air ...
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As everything around us evolves it was soon enough the time of the barometer to evolve, and so it did. From the antique mercury barometer in 1643 - since it was first discovered - to the aneroid barometer in 1843 and to the digital barometer of our days the barometer has come a really long way. We have talked before about how mercury barometers were precise, easy to build and to use but lacked portability and made usage under unsteady conditions more than difficult. Two hundred years later since the mercury barometer was first discovered came the time of the aneroid barometers which were more precise and smaller than the mercury barometers but they were still far from being perfect. Luckily technology kicked in and made possible the creation of the digital barometer. Nowadays, we only have the digital barometer to rely on and that's a really good thing.I'm not saying that mercury and aneroid barometers aren't good it's just that the digital barometer is the future of barometers being a state of the art piece of equipment. The switch from the aneroid barometer to the digital one was made when people realized that most aneroid barometers on the market require a calibration curve to yield accurate pressures, and most do not have such a curve in use, and as a result they may not provide accurate barometric pressure. The precision range offered by digital (electric) barometers is remarkable considering the fact that they can typically provide pressures to within ±1 ...
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