Talk:Earth's atmosphere
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This article was ported here from Wikipedia
I have taken it apart and rebuilt with major reformatting, major deletions, majors additions, new tables and a new image. It is now a full-fledged CZ article. Milton Beychok 18:48, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
My first venture outside my field of expertise
This is my first venture outside my field of expertise. CZ needed this article, so I ported it here from WP and re-did it (see just above).
I would very much appreciate it if someone with atmospheric science expertise would offer comments and/or edits. Milton Beychok 18:59, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
- Some initial thoughts, which may or may not fit.
- Let's be sure to have some redlinks for radio propagation, which isn't restricted to the ionosphere (e.g., troposcatter). I'll try to fill them in.
- I'm not sure if it's worth mentioning the issue of microclimatology vs. climatology/meteorology, and how terrain features can have surprising effects. This is something I learned to appreciate when working on the Vietnam-era "People Sniffer" (an ammonia detector), and also in chemical warfare.
- Will spend some more time later -- I am getting some notes out of an overdue book I need to return to the library before it closes.Howard C. Berkowitz 19:29, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
- Milton, in reply to your post on my talk, I think the article is excellent. As a general rule I'm against ex-wikipedia content appearing on CZ, not out of any dislike for WP (I'm a member of both) but just because I want to see CZ stand on its own feet. But putting that aside this time, I think it's excellent. CZ needs more like you. My knowledge is more extra-terrestrial, but I'll see if there's anything I can add at some point. Tom F Walker 20:30, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
- Milton, it looks good to me, very readable (except for "lapse rate"). I have the following very minor comments: Maybe you should explicitly mention that the inversion layer is not shown in the figures? I was looking for it. Further you write 101,325 Pascals. I'm somewhat pedantic about this, but the accepted (counterintuitive) rule is: if name of person is in full then lowercase, if abbreviated then uppercase, e.g., 1 N = 1 newton. And one should not use plural, hence 101,325 Pascals ---> 101,325 pascal or 101,325 Pa. (Also 26,437 Pascals -->26,437 pascal). As I said, I don't know what a "lapse rate" is and its link is red. Equation 2 is the Boltzmann distribution, known from thermodynamics; maybe it is useful to mention this name? The table below --> the table on the right (or is this my browser?). That's it, cheerio, --Paul Wormer 07:05, 19 August 2009 (UTC)
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