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While looking a few months ago for information on Atmospheric models I came across references to NRLMSISE-00 but no real references related to (the new pages) US Standard Atmosphere, nor a general page linking to various atmospheric models. Thus, after (hopefully, somewhat) clarifying Standard Atmosphere, US Standard Atmosphere etc, this page was created to link to these models as well as several other unrelated atmospheric models. Because of this confusion, I would be very cautious in using the term "standard atmosphere" on this page, except in linking to one of the specific atmospheric models under that name. Obviously, all of this is IMHO, but I wanted to write my original intent. MFago 15:08, 30 May 2006 (UTC)
Really need several plots showing temperature vs altitude (and similarly for density etc), along with the defining equations. MFago 04:13, 11 May 2006 (UTC)
I just found Standard conditions for temperature and pressure -- a page with different content, but a slightly similar focus. At the very least, I'd think we need many more interwiki links and redirects. Lots of duplication in this regard, with some articles confusing the two.... MFago 04:46, 11 May 2006 (UTC)
This page should be moved to Standard atmosphere models. I.e. what is the "idealized" vertical structure of the Earth's atmosphere.
There is now a page Atmospheric model that is about a different, but related topic: predictive CFD models used, e.g., in weather prediction. This has led to some confusion.
Some discussion that has occured on user-talk pages:
This article is rated C-class on Wikipedia's
content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | ||||||||||||||
|
While looking a few months ago for information on Atmospheric models I came across references to NRLMSISE-00 but no real references related to (the new pages) US Standard Atmosphere, nor a general page linking to various atmospheric models. Thus, after (hopefully, somewhat) clarifying Standard Atmosphere, US Standard Atmosphere etc, this page was created to link to these models as well as several other unrelated atmospheric models. Because of this confusion, I would be very cautious in using the term "standard atmosphere" on this page, except in linking to one of the specific atmospheric models under that name. Obviously, all of this is IMHO, but I wanted to write my original intent. MFago 15:08, 30 May 2006 (UTC)
Really need several plots showing temperature vs altitude (and similarly for density etc), along with the defining equations. MFago 04:13, 11 May 2006 (UTC)
I just found Standard conditions for temperature and pressure -- a page with different content, but a slightly similar focus. At the very least, I'd think we need many more interwiki links and redirects. Lots of duplication in this regard, with some articles confusing the two.... MFago 04:46, 11 May 2006 (UTC)
This page should be moved to Standard atmosphere models. I.e. what is the "idealized" vertical structure of the Earth's atmosphere.
There is now a page Atmospheric model that is about a different, but related topic: predictive CFD models used, e.g., in weather prediction. This has led to some confusion.
Some discussion that has occured on user-talk pages: