Rain Guage
A rain gauge is the primary weather instrument used to measure the amount of precipitation. To track the location and movement of precipitation, meteorologists often use radar systems, which can detect rainfall intensity and movement patterns in real time. Together, these tools provide a comprehensive understanding of precipitation events.
This instrument is called pluviometer (a rain gauge). See the link below.
Precipitation is not an instrument, it is a weather phenomenon that refers to any form of water, liquid or solid, falling from the sky. Instruments used to measure precipitation include rain gauges for liquid precipitation and snow gauges for solid precipitation.
A type of radio transmission that tracks precipitation is called weather radar. Weather radar uses radio waves to detect the presence of precipitation in the atmosphere and provides valuable information for weather forecasting and monitoring.
480cm a year depending on the location.
A rain gauge is typically used to measure liquid precipitation, such as rain or melted snow. It is a simple instrument designed to collect and measure the amount of liquid that falls over a specific period of time.
A rain gauge measures in inches because it collects and measures the amount of precipitation that has fallen in an area.
no where
It is an ancient weather instrument called a rain gauge. A funnel is inserted into a tube. A measurement of 1/10 inch in the rain gauge is actually 1 inch of rain. It can measure as little as .01 inches of rain.
Restate the question with a location.
rain vale
Rain gauze measures precipitation at the given place and time.