Chapter 23
Met Instruments

DGCA CPL/ATPL Study Notes — Aviation Meteorology

Source: IC Joshi — Aviation Meteorology (Latest Edition)

Compiled by Capt. Pankaj Pahil

Met Instruments — Master Table (Table 23.1)

This chapter is a concise but critical reference chapter for DGCA examination. The entire chapter is presented as Table 23.1 — a complete summary of meteorological elements, the instruments used to measure them, and their units of measurement. Every row is examinable.
S.No Element Instruments Used Unit of Measure
1 Pressure a. Mercury barometer
b. Aneroid barometer
c. Barograph (Self-recording)
Hectopascal (hPa) or
Millibar (mb) or
Inches (in) of mercury
2 Air Temperature (TT) Dry, Max (Mercury) thermometer
Min (Alcohol) thermometer
Degree Celsius (°C)
3 Dew Point Temperature (TdTd) Dry & Wet bulb (Mercury) thermometers Degree Celsius (°C)
4 Relative Humidity (RH) a. Dry & Wet bulb thermometer
b. Hygrometers
c. Hygrograph (Self-recording)
d. Psychrometer
Percentage (%)
5 Humidity Mixing Ratio (HMR) Hygrograph gm/kg
6 Precipitation
(Rain, Snow)
a. Raingauge
b. Self-recording rain-gauge
c. Hyetograph
d. Snowgauge
mm or cm (depth)
Amount (by melting for snow)
7 Surface Wind
(Direction & Speed)
a. Wind Vane (for Direction)
b. Anemometer
c. Anemograph (Self-recording)
Direction: Degrees from True North in clockwise direction
Speed: Knots (KT)
8 Cloud Base a. Search light / Laser beam
b. Ceilometer / Ceilograph
c. Ceiling Balloon
d. Nephroscope (direction of movement)
e. Alidade
Feet (ft) or m
8 points of compass
9 Visibility / RVR AVRA
Transmissometer or Scopograph
Forward Scatterometer
Manually — Visibility Landmarks
m or km
10 Upper Winds a. Optical Theodolite
b. Hydrogen filled Pilot Balloon
c. Radar Wind (RAWIN)
Direction: in degrees
Speed: Knots (KT) or km/hr (KMH) or m per sec (MPS)
11 Upper Air Pressure, Temperature and Humidity Radio Sonde
Dropsonde (used in cyclones)
Hectopascal (hPa)
Degree Centigrade (°C)
% (Relative Humidity)
12 Clouds Weather Satellites
RADAR

Instrument Classification by Category

Self-Recording / Automatic Instruments

Upper Air Instruments

Cloud Base / Ceiling Instruments

Humidity Instruments

Pressure Instruments

Temperature Instruments

Quick Revision Summary

Practice Q&A

Q1. Pressure is measured in units of:
(a) Knots   (b) Hectopascal (hPa) or Millibar (mb)   (c) Percentage (%)
Correct Answer: (b) Hectopascal (hPa) or Millibar (mb)
Atmospheric pressure is measured in Hectopascals (hPa), Millibars (mb), or inches of mercury. Note: 1 hPa = 1 mb.
🎓 Standard sea level pressure = 1013.25 hPa = 1013.25 mb = 29.92 inches Hg. The DGCA uses hPa in QNH and altimeter settings.
Q2. Minimum temperature is measured by:
(a) Mercury thermometer   (b) Alcohol thermometer   (c) Aneroid thermometer
Correct Answer: (b) Alcohol thermometer
The minimum thermometer uses alcohol (not mercury) because alcohol has a much lower freezing point (~−114°C) than mercury (−39°C), allowing measurement of very low temperatures.
❌ (a) Mercury thermometer: Used for Max temperature and Dry/Wet bulb (air temp and dew point). Mercury freezes at −39°C and cannot measure Arctic/polar minimum temperatures. ❌ (c) Aneroid thermometer: Does not exist — aneroid refers to pressure instruments (barometer).
🎓 Min = Alcohol; Max = Mercury. Remember: "A for Alcohol = A for Arctic cold." Alcohol remains liquid at extremely low temperatures.
Q3. Relative Humidity is measured by:
(a) Barograph   (b) Hygrometer / Psychrometer   (c) Anemometer
Correct Answer: (b) Hygrometer / Psychrometer
Relative Humidity (%) is measured by Hygrometers, Hygrograph (self-recording), Psychrometer (dry and wet bulb combination), and Dry & Wet bulb thermometers.
🎓 Hygrometer = Humidity. Psychrometer = Dry + Wet bulb thermometers = RH. Hygrograph = self-recording hygrometer = also gives Mixing Ratio in gm/kg.
Q4. Cloud base is measured by:
(a) Hygrograph   (b) Ceilometer / Ceilograph / Ceiling Balloon   (c) Anemograph
Correct Answer: (b) Ceilometer / Ceilograph / Ceiling Balloon
Cloud base instruments include: Search light/Laser beam, Ceilometer/Ceilograph, Ceiling Balloon, Nephroscope (direction of movement), and Alidade. Units: feet or metres; 8 points of compass (for direction).
🎓 Cloud base = Ceilometer or Ceiling Balloon. For METAR reporting, cloud base is given in hundreds of feet AGL (e.g., BKN030 = broken cloud at 3000 ft).
Q5. Upper air pressure, temperature and humidity are measured by:
(a) Optical Theodolite   (b) Radiosonde / Dropsonde   (c) AVRA
Correct Answer: (b) Radiosonde / Dropsonde
Radiosonde (balloon-borne) measures upper air pressure, temperature, and humidity. Dropsonde is the same but dropped from aircraft — specifically used in cyclones where balloon launching is not practical.
❌ (a) Optical Theodolite: Used to track pilot balloons for upper WIND measurement (direction and speed only). ❌ (c) AVRA: Used for Visibility / RVR measurement at surface level.
🎓 Radiosonde = upper air P/T/RH (all three parameters). Dropsonde = same as Radiosonde but dropped from aircraft into cyclones. Theodolite/RAWIN = upper WINDS only.
Q6. Upper winds are measured by:
(a) Radiosonde   (b) Radar Wind (RAWIN) / Optical Theodolite / Pilot Balloon   (c) Ceilometer
Correct Answer: (b) Radar Wind (RAWIN) / Optical Theodolite / Pilot Balloon
Upper winds are measured by: Optical Theodolite (tracks pilot balloon), Hydrogen-filled Pilot Balloon, and Radar Wind (RAWIN) — radar tracking of balloon. Units: degrees, Knots (KT), km/hr (KMH), or m/sec (MPS).
🎓 Upper winds: RAWIN, Theodolite, PIBAL. Upper air P/T/RH: Radiosonde/Dropsonde. Don't confuse them! The balloon gives you both — but separate instruments are used for each measurement.
Q7. Visibility / RVR is measured by:
(a) Wind Vane   (b) Transmissometer / Scopograph / Forward Scatterometer   (c) Nephroscope
Correct Answer: (b) Transmissometer / Scopograph / Forward Scatterometer
Visibility and RVR are measured by AVRA, Transmissometer or Scopograph, Forward Scatterometer, or manually using Visibility Landmarks. Units: metres (m) or km.
❌ (a) Wind Vane: Measures wind direction at the surface. ❌ (c) Nephroscope: Measures direction of cloud movement (8 compass points).
🎓 Transmissometer = measures transmission of light through atmosphere = gives RVR. Forward Scatterometer = scatters laser forward into a detector = visibility measurement. Both used at major airports.
Q8. Surface wind direction is reported from True North in which direction?
(a) Anticlockwise   (b) Clockwise   (c) From South
Correct Answer: (b) Clockwise
Wind direction is reported in degrees from True North in the clockwise direction. For example, 090° = East, 180° = South, 270° = West.
🎓 Wind direction convention: From True North, measured clockwise. Used in METAR (e.g., "27015KT" = wind from 270° True at 15 knots). This is same as compass bearing convention.
Q9. Humidity Mixing Ratio is measured in:
(a) %   (b) gm/kg   (c) hPa
Correct Answer: (b) gm/kg
Humidity Mixing Ratio (HMR) is measured in grams per kilogram (gm/kg) of dry air. It is measured using the Hygrograph. Note: Relative Humidity is measured in % (different parameter).
🎓 Key distinction: Relative Humidity = % ; Mixing Ratio = gm/kg. Both are measures of humidity but in different units and with different meanings. Mixing Ratio does not change with temperature changes alone.
Q10. Dropsonde is used in:
(a) Mountain areas   (b) Cyclones (dropped from aircraft)   (c) Upper atmosphere research
Correct Answer: (b) Cyclones (dropped from aircraft)
Dropsonde is a Radiosonde-equivalent instrument that is DROPPED from reconnaissance aircraft into cyclones to gather upper air pressure, temperature, and humidity data where balloon launching is not feasible.
🎓 Radiosonde goes UP (balloon); Dropsonde goes DOWN (aircraft drop). Both measure upper air P/T/RH. Dropsonde specifically used in cyclone reconnaissance missions.

Master Reference Table — Full Instrument Summary

ElementPrimary InstrumentsSelf-Recording VersionUnit
PressureMercury barometer, Aneroid barometerBarographhPa / mb / in Hg
Air TemperatureMercury thermometer (Dry), Mercury (Max), Alcohol (Min)Thermograph°C
Dew Point (TdTd)Dry + Wet bulb (Mercury) thermometers°C
Relative HumidityPsychrometer, Dry + Wet bulb, HygrometerHygrograph%
Humidity Mixing RatioHygrographgm/kg
PrecipitationRaingauge, SnowgaugeSelf-recording rain-gauge, Hyetographmm or cm
Surface Wind DirectionWind VaneAnemographDegrees (True N, CW)
Surface Wind SpeedAnemometerAnemographKnots (KT)
Cloud BaseCeilometer, Search light, Ceiling Balloon, Alidade, NephroscopeCeilographft or m / 8 points compass
Visibility / RVRAVRA, Transmissometer, Scopograph, Forward Scatterometerm or km
Upper WindsOptical Theodolite, Pilot Balloon (PIBAL), RAWINDegrees / KT or KMH or MPS
Upper Air P/T/RHRadiosonde (balloon), Dropsonde (cyclone)hPa / °C / %
CloudsWeather Satellites, RADAR

Mnemonics

MnemonicMeaning
"Min = Alcohol (A for Arctic)"Minimum thermometer uses Alcohol (low freezing point)
"Radiosonde Up, Dropsonde Down"Radiosonde = balloon; Dropsonde = dropped from aircraft (cyclones)
"RAWIN = Radar Wind"Upper wind measurement by radar tracking of balloon
"Hygrograph = HMR (gm/kg)"Hygrograph gives Humidity Mixing Ratio in gm/kg
"Psychrometer = Dry + Wet = RH%"Psychrometer uses wet and dry bulb thermometers to find RH
"Transmissometer = Visibility"Measures transmission of light = visibility/RVR
"Nephroscope = Cloud Direction"Nephroscope measures direction of cloud movement (8 compass points)
"Barograph = Pressure graph"Self-recording pressure trace; aneroid based
Capt. Pankaj Pahil