Science, asked by farhanfarhan17810, 6 months ago

rain gauge is used to measure........... *

Humidity

Rainfal

Answers

Answered by samarthpawar48
1

Answer:

A rain gauge (also known as an udometer, pluviometer, or an ombrometer) is an instrument used by meteorologists and hydrologists to gather and measure the amount of liquid precipitation over an area in a predefined period of time.

Explanation:

The standard United States National Weather Service rain gauge, developed at the start of the 20th century, consists of an 8-inch diameter (203 mm) funnel emptying into a graduated cylinder, 1.17 inches (29.7 mm) in diameter, which fits inside a larger container that is 8 inches in diameter and 20 inches (508 mm) tall. If the rainwater overflows the graduated inner cylinder, the larger outer container will catch it. When measurements are taken, the height of the water in the small graduated cylinder is measured, and the excess overflow in the large container is carefully poured into another graduated cylinder and measured to give the total rainfall. A cone meter is sometimes used to prevent leakage that can result in alteration of the data. In locations using the metric system, the cylinder is usually marked in mm and will measure up to 250 millimetres (9.8 in) of rainfall. Each horizontal line on the cylinder is 0.5 millimetres (0.02 in). In areas still using Imperial units, each horizontal line represents 0.01 inch.

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