Meteorological noise: Difference between revisions
From Glossary of Meteorology
imported>Perlwikibot (Created page with " {{TermHeader}} {{TermSearch}} <div class="termentry"> <div class="term"> == meteorological noise == </div> <div class="definition"><div class="short_definition">Origin...") |
imported>Perlwikibot No edit summary |
||
Line 9: | Line 9: | ||
</div> | </div> | ||
<div class="definition"><div class="short_definition">Originally, the small-scale, high-frequency solutions to the [[fundamental equations of hydrodynamics]], which may obscure the solution required for [[numerical forecasting]].</div><br/><div class="paragraph">However, the meaning must be extended to include unwanted frequencies in general, and the term | <div class="definition"><div class="short_definition">Originally, the small-scale, high-frequency solutions to the [[fundamental equations of hydrodynamics]], which may obscure the solution required for [[numerical forecasting]].</div><br/><div class="paragraph">However, the meaning must be extended to include unwanted frequencies in general, and the term "noise" may be applied legitimately by the investigator of [[atmospheric tides]] to the moving [[cyclonic-scale]] weather patterns. <br/>''See'' [[noise filtering]], [[Kalman–Bucy filter]].</div><br/> </div> | ||
</div> | </div> | ||
Revision as of 14:40, 20 February 2012
meteorological noise
Originally, the small-scale, high-frequency solutions to the fundamental equations of hydrodynamics, which may obscure the solution required for numerical forecasting.
However, the meaning must be extended to include unwanted frequencies in general, and the term "noise" may be applied legitimately by the investigator of atmospheric tides to the moving cyclonic-scale weather patterns.
See noise filtering, Kalman–Bucy filter.
See noise filtering, Kalman–Bucy filter.