Geography, asked by tanaykanduri007, 9 months ago

Structure of rain gauge in brief

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Answered by FlorenceFarrow
2

Answer:

The standard rain gauge instrument generally consists of a funnel connecting to a graduated cylinder which is marked in millimeters. It has an outer cylinder which is 20 cm in diameter and 50 cm tall. ... The amount of water in the outer cylinder and the inner cylinder are taken for rainfall measurement.

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Answered by viratdhoni187
0

Explanation:

A rain gauge is an instrument used by meteorologists and hydrologists to measure precipitation (e.g. rain, snow, hail or sleet) in a certain amount of time. It is usually measured in millimetres. Rain gauge is a meteorological instrument for determining the depth of precipitation (usually in mm) that occurs over a unit area (usually one metre square) and thus measuring rainfall amount. One millimetre of measured precipitation is the equivalent to one litre of rainfall per metre square.

@INDIAN ARMY FAN ⚡⚡

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