意大利最早温度记录的仪器和观测问题:数据恢复和校正的方法

IF 3 Q2 METEOROLOGY & ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCES
Climate Pub Date : 2023-08-27 DOI:10.3390/cli11090178
Dario Camuffo, A. della Valle, F. Becherini
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引用次数: 0

摘要

数据抢救(即复制、数字化和归档)和数据恢复之间有区别,数据恢复意味着破译、解释和转换早期仪器读数及其元数据,以获得现代单位的高质量数据集。这需要一种多学科的方法,包括:古地理和拉丁语及其他语言的知识,以阅读手写日志和其他文件;在17世纪、18世纪和19世纪初的文化框架内解读原始文本、数据和元数据的科学史;物理和技术,以识别早期仪器或校准的偏差,或纠正观测偏差;以及天文学,以计算和转换从黄昏开始的标准小时的原始时间。玻璃中液体温度计于1641年发明,最早的温度记录始于1654年。从那时起,基于空气或选定的偏离线性的测温液体的热膨胀,发明了不同类型的温度计。参考点、温度计刻度和校准方法不具有可比性,也不总是得到充分描述。温度计有不同的位置和暴露,例如,室内、室外、窗户、花园或屋顶上,面向不同的方向。每天只阅读一次或几次,不一定遵守精确的时间表:这种偏差是针对最流行的阅读时间组合进行分析的。时间是根据日晷和当地的太阳来计算的,但时间是从黄昏开始计算的。1789-1790年,意大利改变了系统,所有城市都从较低的最高点(即当地午夜)开始计算小时数,这样每个城市都有自己的当地时间;1866年,所有的意大利城市都遵循罗马当地时间;1893年,整个意大利采用了现在的系统,以协调世界时和时区为基础。1873年,国际气象委员会(IMC)成立,后来转变为世界气象组织(WMO),建立了仪器和观测协议的标准化,所有数据都变得完全可比。在处理1654年至1873年的早期工具时期时,记录的比较、校正和同质化是相当困难的,主要是因为元数据的稀缺甚至缺失。本文讨论了这种混乱的情况,讨论了主要问题,但也讨论了识别缺失元数据、区分室内和室外读数、将未知或任意单位的早期数据集更正并转换为现代单位的方法,以及在哪些情况下有可能达到WMO要求的质量水平。目的是解释恢复早期仪器记录所需的方法,即应执行的操作,以破译、解释、校正原始原始数据,并将其转换为可用于气候研究的高质量温度数据集。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Instrumental and Observational Problems of the Earliest Temperature Records in Italy: A Methodology for Data Recovery and Correction
A distinction is made between data rescue (i.e., copying, digitizing, and archiving) and data recovery that implies deciphering, interpreting, and transforming early instrumental readings and their metadata to obtain high-quality datasets in modern units. This requires a multidisciplinary approach that includes: palaeography and knowledge of Latin and other languages to read the handwritten logs and additional documents; history of science to interpret the original text, data, and metadata within the cultural frame of the 17th, 18th, and early 19th centuries; physics and technology to recognize bias of early instruments or calibrations, or to correct for observational bias; and astronomy to calculate and transform the original time in canonical hours that started from twilight. The liquid-in-glass thermometer was invented in 1641 and the earliest temperature records started in 1654. Since then, different types of thermometers have been invented, based on the thermal expansion of air or selected thermometric liquids with deviation from linearity. Reference points, thermometric scales, and calibration methodologies were not comparable, and not always adequately described. Thermometers had various locations and exposures, e.g., indoor, outdoor, on windows, gardens or roofs, facing different directions. Readings were made only one or a few times a day, not necessarily respecting a precise time schedule: this bias is analysed for the most popular combinations of reading times. The time was based on sundials and local Sun, but the hours were counted starting from twilight. In 1789–1790, Italy changed system and all cities counted hours from their lower culmination (i.e., local midnight), so that every city had its local time; in 1866, all the Italian cities followed the local time of Rome; in 1893, the whole of Italy adopted the present-day system, based on the Coordinated Universal Time and the time zones. In 1873, when the International Meteorological Committee (IMC) was founded, later transformed into the World Meteorological Organization (WMO), a standardization of instruments and observational protocols was established, and all data became fully comparable. In dealing with the early instrumental period, from 1654 to 1873, the comparison, correction, and homogenization of records is quite difficult, mainly because of the scarcity or even absence of metadata. This paper deals with this confused situation, discussing the main problems, but also the methodologies to recognize missing metadata, distinguish indoor from outdoor readings, correct and transform early datasets in unknown or arbitrary units into modern units, and, finally, in which cases it is possible to reach the quality level required by the WMO. The aim is to explain the methodology needed to recover early instrumental records, i.e., the operations that should be performed to decipher, interpret, correct, and transform the original raw data into a high-quality dataset of temperature, usable for climate studies.
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来源期刊
Climate
Climate Earth and Planetary Sciences-Atmospheric Science
CiteScore
5.50
自引率
5.40%
发文量
172
审稿时长
11 weeks
期刊介绍: Climate is an independent, international and multi-disciplinary open access journal focusing on climate processes of the earth, covering all scales and involving modelling and observation methods. The scope of Climate includes: Global climate Regional climate Urban climate Multiscale climate Polar climate Tropical climate Climate downscaling Climate process and sensitivity studies Climate dynamics Climate variability (Interseasonal, interannual to decadal) Feedbacks between local, regional, and global climate change Anthropogenic climate change Climate and monsoon Cloud and precipitation predictions Past, present, and projected climate change Hydroclimate.
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