Abstract
AbstractWe installed a meteorological recording system at Badwater (elev. −75 m), the lowest point in Death Valley, California and recorded data over the period 1998–2019. A second station (the Outhouse Station) was established nearby from 2014 to 2019. Here, we report on and publicly archive the data from these two stations. Of interest was the comparison between two air temperature measurements at the Badwater Station, the first with an aspirated platinum resistance temperature device and the second with a thermistor probe in a passive sun shield. During the hottest periods of the summer when temperatures were typically between 30°C at night and 50°C daily peak, the passively shielded sensor indicated up to 0.5°C warmer than the aspirated temperature sensor due to radiative effects. The data suggest a correction for radiative heating of (T–35)/30, for T > 35°C, where, T, is the uncorrected temperature reading of a passively shielded sensor subtracted after any calibration at lower temperatures. Our station was the first precision temperature measurements at Badwater. A longer record exists for the reporting station near the visitor's centre at the Furnace Creek. The summer temperature maxima at the Badwater site correlate well with the values the same day from the Furnace Creek site. The daily maximum temperatures in winter at the Badwater site appear to be about 1°C lower than at the Furnace Creek site. The largest differences are in the minimum temperatures for which the Badwater site averages about 2–3°C warmer than the Furnace Creek site.
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