Through the efforts of the Geological and Marine
Sciences Department, Rider has a weather station atop the Science
and Technology Center that reports almost to the second weather
conditions on the Lawrenceville campus.
Assistant Professor Reed Schwimmer
was instrumental in the department's purchase and installation
of the Davis Instruments Vantage Pro weather station and LCD monitor.
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Dr. Reed Schwimmer |
Weather monitor with display data of eight current weather
condiditions |
What Dr. Schwimmer finds exciting is that, while
the data are primarily for classroom use, the department can share
the "instant" weather data with the campus community. In the lobby
located at the west end of the Science and Technology Center,
there is a large monitor that displays data for eight current
weather conditions - barometric pressure, outside temperature,
wind direction, wind speed, wind chill factor, rainfall amount,
humidity, and dew point. The system also can be setup to provide
additional readings and to display charts of changing weather
parameters over time.
"We wanted to have a source of weather data that
we could use in our classrooms, so relationships between atmospheric
processes and meteorological effects can be established and explored,"
said Dr. Schwimmer. He said such discussion is particularly valuable
in the department's Earth systems science, oceanography, and environmental
sciences classes. Other classes could also find data useful. For
example, Dr. Hongbing Sun could find rain data
important in the soils and surficial processes class, while Dr.
Laura Hyatt could use similar data in the general ecology
class.
Campus community members can access the current
weather data on the Web at www.rider.edu/~weather.
Currently the Web site displays the data in a tabular format.
In the next few months, however, Dr. Schwimmer will be working
with three senior computer information systems students to design
and implement a graphic-rich Web site with possible links to local
radar data. This project will provide real-world, hands-on experience
for the students in Web site development, Dr. Schwimmer said.
He also praised the assistance the department received
from the Office of Information Technology and the Facilities Department
to hard wire and install the weather station to a computer and
monitor.
In the near future, Rider could also become one
of the many sites around the state to have its weather information
shown online through the New Jersey Climate Data Center.