Precipitation is generally detected by different types of radar, which send out a beam of radio waves just above the earth's surface and wait for them to scatter off of rain drops and snow flakes.
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 seismometer is the instrument that detects seismic waves. It records the ground vibrations caused by earthquakes and other seismic events. These devices are crucial for monitoring and studying earthquakes.
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 seismograph is the instrument used for recording the intensity and duration of an earthquake. It detects and measures the motion and vibrations of the ground caused by seismic waves.
This instrument is called pluviometer (a rain gauge). See the link below.
The physicist who invented the Geiger counter, the instrument that detects radioactivity, was Hans Geiger.
A seismometer detects the earthquake vibrations that the seismograph records.
Seismometer
The instrument that detects, measures, and records the energy of earthquake vibrations is called a seismometer or seismograph.
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.
Manometer
A seismometer is the instrument that detects seismic waves. It records the ground vibrations caused by earthquakes and other seismic events. These devices are crucial for monitoring and studying earthquakes.
The instrument that detects seismic waves is called a seismometer or seismograph. It measures the vibrations caused by seismic waves in the Earth's crust and can help to monitor and study earthquakes.
Rain Guage
A Geiger-Müller counter is an instrument that detects radiation by measuring the electric current produced when ionizing radiation interacts with the gas inside the detector. This current is amplified and counted, providing a measure of the radiation intensity.
Yes, it is called the pusometer. It detects when and where an earthquake will strike, it is quite accurate.
A cloud chamber is an instrument that detects radioactivity by condensing gases to create visible vapor trails from ionizing radiation particles. These trails make the presence of radioactivity visible and can help identify the type and energy of the particles.