Atmosphere (Aug 2024)

As Regular as Clockwork: Alexander von Humboldt, Robert de Lamanon and the Beginning of the Scientific Investigation of the Tidal Barometric Oscillation

  • Kevin Hamilton

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos15091052
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 9
p. 1052

Abstract

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The cause of the systematic daily march of barometric pressure in the tropics, notably the late morning and late evening peaks seen almost every day at all locations, was a puzzle that persisted through the nineteenth and much of the twentieth centuries. The efforts to explain the physics of the prominent 12-h solar tidal variation helped inspire some of the earliest developments in theoretical atmospheric dynamics and ultimately led in the 1960’s to a satisfactory dynamical theory for the atmospheric tides. These important theoretical developments followed the observational discoveries, which date to the late 18th and early 19th centuries, of the surprising character of the barometric daily march and of its resolution into solar and lunar period cycles. These important, if simple, discoveries emerged primarily from the efforts of European scientists to systematically study the environment in remote areas of the globe. The two key figures in initially advancing the scientific community’s understanding of the character of barometric tides were the great German polymath Alexander von Humboldt (1769–1859) and the French naturalist Robert de Lamanon (1752–1787), who each made their discoveries on their most famous and colorful scientific expeditions of their respective careers. This paper examines the history of the early observations of the barometric tide.

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