Kestrel, 4200 pocket air flow, Tracker 23 – Kestrel 4200 (HVAC) User Manual

Page 12: Glossary

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Kestrel

®

4200 Pocket Air Flow

®

Tracker

23

20 min

22 days, 5 hr, 20 min

30 min

33 days, 8 hr

1 hr

66 days, 16 hr

2 hr

133 days, 8 hr

5 hr

333 days, 8 hr

12 hr

800 days

GLOSSARY

The below definitions have been greatly simplified in order to keep this section brief. We strongly

recommend that anyone who wishes to make use of these measurements refer to one of the many

excellent weather references available for a more in-depth definition. On the internet, visit www.usatoday.

com or www.noaa.gov. Or, locate the USA Today publication, The Weather Book. Please note that any words

in a definition printed in italics are themselves defined in this glossary.
Air Flow

The volume of air passing through an area for a given period of time. This is commonly calculated by

multiplying the air velocity by the cross sectional area through which the air is passing.
Altimeter Setting

An aviation term for the local barometric pressure. Same as reference pressure.
Altitude

The distance above sea level. The Kestrel Meter calculates altitude based on the measured station pressure

and the input barometric pressure — or “reference pressure”.

Barometric Pressure

The air pressure of your location reduced to sea level. Pressure will change as weather systems move into

your location. Falling pressure indicates the arrival of a low pressure system and expected precipitation or

storm conditions. Steady or rising pressure indicates clear weather. A correct altitude must be input for the

Kestrel Meter to display barometric pressure correctly.
Density Altitude

The altitude at which you would be, given the current air density. Often used by pilots in order to determine

how an aircraft will perform. Also of interest to individuals who tune high performance internal combustion

engines, such as racecar engines.
Dewpoint

The temperature to which air must be cooled in order for condensation to occur. The difference between

dewpoint and temperature is referred to as the “temperature/dew point spread”. A low dewpoint spread

indicates high relative humidity, while a large dewpoint spread indicates dry conditions.
Heat Index

A practical measure of how hot the current combination of relative humidity and temperature feels to a

human body. Higher relative humidity makes it seem hotter because the body’s ability to cool itself by

evaporating perspiration is reduced.
Humidity Ratio

The ratio between the actual mass of water vapor present in moist air — to the mass of the dry air.
Reference Pressure

The local barometric pressure. Input to the altitude screen to provide correct altitude readings. Also known

as the altimeter setting.

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