Climate Data Record

A Climate Data Record (CDR) is a specific definition of a climate data series, developed by the Committee on Climate Data Records from NOAA Operational Satellites of the National Research Council at the request of NOAA in the context of satellite records.[1] It is defined as "a time series of measurements of sufficient length, consistency, and continuity to determine climate variability and climate change.".[2]

Such measurements provide an objective basis for the understanding and prediction of climate and its variability, such as global warming.

Interim Climate Data Record (ICDR)

An Interim Climate Data Record (ICDR) is a dataset that has been forward processed, using the baselined CDR algorithm and processing environment but whose consistency and continuity have not been verified. Eventually it will be necessary to perform a new reprocessing of the CDR and ICDR parts together to guarantee consistency, and the new reprocessed data record will replace the old CDR.

Fundamental Climate Data Record (FCDR)

A Fundamental Climate Data Record is a long-term data record of calibrated and quality-controlled data designed to allow the generation of homogeneous products that are accurate and stable enough for climate monitoring.

Examples of CDRs

gollark: <@330678593904443393> Quartz things don't keep time that well.
gollark: TAI doesn't do leap seconds. I think that's it.
gollark: Er. Some reference frame.
gollark: If you want universal time you have to base it on something.
gollark: Just use TAI seconds or something if you want a universal-ish time measurement.

See also

  • Temperature record

References

  1. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2010-07-20. Retrieved 2010-09-22.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. http://www.nap.edu/catalog.php?record_id=10944 NRC (National Research Council) 2004. Climate Data Records from Environmental Satellites. Washington D.C.: National Academy Press.I SBN-10: 0-309-09168-3, ISBN 978-0-309-09168-8
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