they use the information from their observations to make inferences
yesyes they can
yesyes they can
Yes, if you look on wikipeda or Bing it will tell you that.
Weather forecasters face the challenge of predicting what they may have never seen. Since weather is very unpredictable, it is impossible with our current technology to have a 100% accurate view of what the weather will do. the forecasters must do what they can to make a very well educated guess about what the weather will do.
barometer and the thermometer
they use we
Numerical weather (computer) models.
Meteorologist
Patterns
Before making a weather forecast, weather forecasters "get in touch with the weather". They look at the weather that has happened in the past 24 hours. They look at the current weather. They look at local weather and weather for the whole hemisphere. They look for patterns in the weather. They use tools such as satellite, radar, and surface maps, to help them predict the weather. They also look at computer models of the weather. They collaborate with other meteorologists. Then they make their forecast!
Before making a weather forecast, weather forecasters "get in touch with the weather". They look at the weather that has happened in the past 24 hours. They look at the current weather. They look at local weather and weather for the whole hemisphere. They look for patterns in the weather. They use tools such as satellite, radar, and surface maps, to help them predict the weather. They also look at computer models of the weather. They collaborate with other meteorologists. Then they make their forecast!
That's not the way it works. Satellites photograph such atmospheric phenomena as cloud movement. Weather forecasters watch as the clouds move, generally from west to east although hurricane clouds move across the Atlantic from eas to west. As they see the weather approaching an area, they can PREDICT how the weather will be based on how fast it's moving. Just like you can see a car coming down the street at a steady rate of speed, you can predict how long it will take for the car to run you down. You get out of the way -- people take cover form bad weather.