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Chapter 2 THE FORMATION OF DEW

Word Count: 1043    |    Released on: 06/12/2017

ten the drops of dew?" We repeat the question in another form, "Whence comes the re

e that any day for yourself by bringing a glass of very cold water into a warm room; the outer surface of the glass is dimmed at once by the moisture from the air. M. Picket was puzzled when he saw that a thermometer, suspended five feet above the ground, marked a lower temperature on clear nights than one suspended at the height of seventy-five feet; because it was alw

the time in the air, and to suppose that dew is mostly formed of vapour rising from the ground, was the result of some observations made in summer on the temperature of the soil at a small depth under the surface, and of the air over it, after sunset and at night. He was struck with the unvarying fact that the ground, a little below the surface, was warmer than the air over it. By placing a thermometer among stems

y is dewed, and the grass inside is wetter than that outside. On some nights there is no dew outside the tray, and on all nights the deposit on the inner is heavier than t

h of the rising vapour is generally carried away by the passing wind, however gentle; hence we have it condensed as dew on the roofs of houses, and other places, where you would think that it had fallen from above. The va

l of the road is dripping wet when the top is dry. You will find, too, that around pieces of iron and old implements in the field, there is a very marked increase of grass, ow

the lawn a piece of turf six inches square and a quarter of an inch thick. Place this in a shallow pan, and carefully note the weight of both turf and pan with the sensitive balance. To prevent loss by evaporation, the weighing should be done in an open shed. Then place the pan and turf at su

st frozen dew, we shall find visible evid

l song, "Annie Laurie

's braes a

rly fa's

om the ground. The song, however, will be sung as sweetly as ever

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Contents

Meteorology
Chapter 1 INTRODUCTION
06/12/2017
Meteorology
Chapter 2 THE FORMATION OF DEW
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Meteorology
Chapter 3 TRUE AND FALSE DEW
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Meteorology
Chapter 4 HOAR-FROST
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Meteorology
Chapter 5 FOG
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Meteorology
Chapter 6 THE NUMBERING OF THE DUST
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Meteorology
Chapter 7 DUST AND ATMOSPHERIC PHENOMENA
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Meteorology
Chapter 8 A FOG-COUNTER
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Meteorology
Chapter 9 FORMATION OF CLOUDS
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Meteorology
Chapter 10 DECAY OF CLOUDS
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Meteorology
Chapter 11 IT ALWAYS RAINS
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Meteorology
Chapter 12 HAZE
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Meteorology
Chapter 13 HAZING EFFECTS OF ATMOSPHERIC DUST
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Meteorology
Chapter 14 THUNDER CLEARS THE AIR
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Meteorology
Chapter 15 DISEASE-GERMS IN THE AIR
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Meteorology
Chapter 16 A CHANGE OF AIR
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Meteorology
Chapter 17 THE OLD MOON IN THE NEW MOON'S ARMS
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Meteorology
Chapter 18 AN AUTUMN AFTERGLOW
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Meteorology
Chapter 19 A WINTER FOREGLOW
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Meteorology
Chapter 20 THE RAINBOW
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Meteorology
Chapter 21 THE AURORA BOREALIS
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Meteorology
Chapter 22 THE BLUE SKY
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Meteorology
Chapter 23 A SANITARY DETECTIVE
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Meteorology
Chapter 24 FOG AND SMOKE
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Meteorology
Chapter 25 ELECTRICAL DEPOSITION OF SMOKE
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Meteorology
Chapter 26 RADIATION FROM SNOW
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Meteorology
Chapter 27 MOUNTAIN GIANTS
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Meteorology
Chapter 28 THE WIND
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Meteorology
Chapter 29 CYCLONES AND ANTI-CYCLONES
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Meteorology
Chapter 30 RAIN PHENOMENA
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Meteorology
Chapter 31 THE METEOROLOGY OF BEN NEVIS
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Meteorology
Chapter 32 THE WEATHER AND INFLUENZA
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Meteorology
Chapter 33 CLIMATE
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Meteorology
Chapter 34 THE "CHALLENGER" WEATHER REPORTS
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Meteorology
Chapter 35 WEATHER-FORECASTING
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