Dear Steve,
I agree that standard name "atmosphere_mass_content_*" is not
self-descriptive. It is not clear from its name (but the description
clarifies it!) whether it is the mass content either with respect to a
column with given base area or with respect to the whole atmosphere.
"atmosphere_mass_content_*" seems to be quite established as term in the
CF standard names (200+ by number). I am not sure whether it is
reasonable to change all these names? Which alternative term would you
suggest?
For "mass_concentration_*_in_air" I do not see this problem. The
document, which you linked, points out that one should not use
'concentration of X' because it could be a molar or mass concentration
(or something else). Therefore, the physical quantity in the numerator
should be used as prefix.
Regards,
Daniel
Am 2017-08-14 20:39, schrieb Steven Emmerson:
On Mon, Aug 14, 2017 at 9:29 AM, Daniel Neumann
<[email protected]> wrote:
Steve,
Thank you for your comment.
I am not sure whether I got the comment correct: It does not become
clear which mass per which volume is described by
"mass_concentration_of_X_in_dry_aerosol_in_air"? You mean ambiguity
whether it is either 'mass of X' in the volume of
'dry_aerosol_in_air' of 'only mass of X, which is in dry aerosol' in
the volume of 'air'? With respect to the guide you linked: it does
not become what 'B' actually is? Thus, I should re-think the order
and the connecting prepositions?
Or do want to point out that the terms "atmosphere_mass_content_*"
and "mass_concentration_*_in_air" might be problematic in general?
The latter.
Regards,
Steve Emmerson
--
Daniel Neumann
Leibniz Institute for Baltic Sea Research Warnemuende
Physical Oceanography and Instrumentation
Seestrasse 15
18119 Rostock
Germany
phone: +49-381-5197-287
fax: +49-381-5197-114 or 440
e-mail: [email protected]
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