Weathering Heights: The Emergence of Aeronautical Meteorology as an Infrastructural Science

The first half of the 20th century was an era of weathering heights. As the development of powered flight made the free atmosphere militarily and economically relevant, meteorologists encountered new kinds of weather conditions at altitude. Pilots also learned to weather heights, as they struggled t...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Turner, Roger
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:https://upenn-prod.atmire.com/handle/20.500.14332/18208
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14332/18208
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spelling ftunivpenn:oai:repository.upenn.edu:20.500.14332/18208 2024-06-23T07:50:45+00:00 Weathering Heights: The Emergence of Aeronautical Meteorology as an Infrastructural Science Turner, Roger 2010-01-01 https://upenn-prod.atmire.com/handle/20.500.14332/18208 https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14332/18208 unknown https://upenn-prod.atmire.com/handle/20.500.14332/18208 1 255 AAI3488596 Dissertations available from ProQuest published Meteorology|Atmospheric sciences Dissertation/Thesis 2010 ftunivpenn https://doi.org/20.500.14332/18208 2024-05-29T03:59:34Z The first half of the 20th century was an era of weathering heights. As the development of powered flight made the free atmosphere militarily and economically relevant, meteorologists encountered new kinds of weather conditions at altitude. Pilots also learned to weather heights, as they struggled to survive in an atmosphere that revealed surprising dangers like squall lines, fog, icing, and turbulence. Aeronautical meteorology evolved out of these encounters, a heterogeneous body of knowledge that included guidelines for routing aircraft, networks for observing the upper air using scientific instruments, and procedures for synthesizing those observations into weather forecasts designed for pilots. As meteorologists worked to make the skies safe for aircraft, they remade their science around the physics of the free atmosphere. The dissertation tracks a small group of Scandinavian meteorologists, the “Bergen School,” who came to be the dominant force in world meteorology by forecasting for Arctic exploration flights, designing airline weather services, and training thousands of military weather officers during World War II. After the war, some of these military meteorologists invented the TV weather report (now the most widely consumed genre of popular science) by combining the narrative of the pre-fight weather briefing with the visual style of comic-illustrated training manuals. The dissertation argues that aeronautical meteorology is representative of what I call the “infrastructural sciences,” a set of organizationally intensive, purposefully invisible, applied sciences. These sciences enable the reliable operation of large technological systems by integrating theory-derived knowledge with routine environmental observation. The dissertation articulates a set of characteristics for identifying and understanding infrastructural science, and then argues that these culturally modest technical practices play a pervasive role in maintaining industrial lifeways. It concludes by noting that while meteorology ... Thesis Arctic University of Pennsylvania: ScholaryCommons@Penn Arctic Bergen
institution Open Polar
collection University of Pennsylvania: ScholaryCommons@Penn
op_collection_id ftunivpenn
language unknown
topic Meteorology|Atmospheric sciences
spellingShingle Meteorology|Atmospheric sciences
Turner, Roger
Weathering Heights: The Emergence of Aeronautical Meteorology as an Infrastructural Science
topic_facet Meteorology|Atmospheric sciences
description The first half of the 20th century was an era of weathering heights. As the development of powered flight made the free atmosphere militarily and economically relevant, meteorologists encountered new kinds of weather conditions at altitude. Pilots also learned to weather heights, as they struggled to survive in an atmosphere that revealed surprising dangers like squall lines, fog, icing, and turbulence. Aeronautical meteorology evolved out of these encounters, a heterogeneous body of knowledge that included guidelines for routing aircraft, networks for observing the upper air using scientific instruments, and procedures for synthesizing those observations into weather forecasts designed for pilots. As meteorologists worked to make the skies safe for aircraft, they remade their science around the physics of the free atmosphere. The dissertation tracks a small group of Scandinavian meteorologists, the “Bergen School,” who came to be the dominant force in world meteorology by forecasting for Arctic exploration flights, designing airline weather services, and training thousands of military weather officers during World War II. After the war, some of these military meteorologists invented the TV weather report (now the most widely consumed genre of popular science) by combining the narrative of the pre-fight weather briefing with the visual style of comic-illustrated training manuals. The dissertation argues that aeronautical meteorology is representative of what I call the “infrastructural sciences,” a set of organizationally intensive, purposefully invisible, applied sciences. These sciences enable the reliable operation of large technological systems by integrating theory-derived knowledge with routine environmental observation. The dissertation articulates a set of characteristics for identifying and understanding infrastructural science, and then argues that these culturally modest technical practices play a pervasive role in maintaining industrial lifeways. It concludes by noting that while meteorology ...
format Thesis
author Turner, Roger
author_facet Turner, Roger
author_sort Turner, Roger
title Weathering Heights: The Emergence of Aeronautical Meteorology as an Infrastructural Science
title_short Weathering Heights: The Emergence of Aeronautical Meteorology as an Infrastructural Science
title_full Weathering Heights: The Emergence of Aeronautical Meteorology as an Infrastructural Science
title_fullStr Weathering Heights: The Emergence of Aeronautical Meteorology as an Infrastructural Science
title_full_unstemmed Weathering Heights: The Emergence of Aeronautical Meteorology as an Infrastructural Science
title_sort weathering heights: the emergence of aeronautical meteorology as an infrastructural science
publishDate 2010
url https://upenn-prod.atmire.com/handle/20.500.14332/18208
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14332/18208
geographic Arctic
Bergen
geographic_facet Arctic
Bergen
genre Arctic
genre_facet Arctic
op_source 1
255
AAI3488596
Dissertations available from ProQuest
published
op_relation https://upenn-prod.atmire.com/handle/20.500.14332/18208
op_doi https://doi.org/20.500.14332/18208
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