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The study of Earth's atmosphere and its processes is called atmospheric science or aerology.
The subjects of these films varied widely from aerology and not compact tactics to ground crew aircraft maintenance.
Richard Assmann had a particular interest in high altitude research of the Earth's atmosphere and was a pioneer in the field of aerology.
The first being geophysical; seismology, geomagnetism, earth currents, aurora, cosmic rays, radio propagation, aerology and meteorology.
"Aerology Remix" (encore)
With his naval aerology, shipboard, and aviation experiences, "Reich" was the ideal leader to guide the Weather Bureau through its wartime mobilization.
Work was carried out on environment monitoring, and research in the fields of meteorology, oceanology, glaciology, and aerology was carried out.
True went on to command Destroyer Division Four from late 1942 to 1943, and then served in a variety of Navy Weather and Aerology billets until he retired.
In 1957 the US Navy began an operational aerology system known as Transosonde (trans-ocean sounding), consisting of almost daily balloon flights across the Pacific Ocean from Japan.
For a brief period starting in 1945, the Secretary of the Navy approved distinct insignia for Naval Aviation Observers with Navigation, Radar, Tactical, and Aerology specialization.
"NP" stations carry out the program of complex year-round research in the fields of oceanology, ice studies, meteorology, aerology, geophysics, hydrochemistry, hydrophysics, as well as in the field of marine biology.
It was named by the US-ACAN for James M. Beall, U.S. Weather Bureau observer with Operation Windmill who assisted staff aerology officers with forecasting duties.
Later he served as the aerology officer aboard the USS Saratoga while it was flying missions against Tokyo and Iwo Jima in the Pacific Ocean theater of World War II, from 1944 to 1945.
The feature was photograph air by the German Antarctic Expedition (1938-39) and named for Heinrich Seilkopf, head of the marine aerology section of the Deutsche Seewarte (German Hydrographic Office) in Hamburg.
These ascents were performed in order to study variances of climatic conditions above different locations in Europe, to work to bring about uniformity in methods of observation, and to create increased cooperation among nations in the new science of aerology.
A Fellow of the American Meteorological Society, he received the society's Meisinger Award in 1965 for his work in aerology and meteorology and the Carl-Gustaf Rossby Research Medal in 1976 for his contributions to understanding air turbulence.