#542 in Science & math books

Reddit mentions of An Introduction to Dynamic Meteorology (Volume 88) (International Geophysics (Volume 88))

Sentiment score: 3
Reddit mentions: 4

We found 4 Reddit mentions of An Introduction to Dynamic Meteorology (Volume 88) (International Geophysics (Volume 88)). Here are the top ones.

An Introduction to Dynamic Meteorology (Volume 88) (International Geophysics (Volume 88))
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  • Academic Press
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Height9 Inches
Length6 Inches
Number of items1
Weight1.8959754532 Pounds
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Found 4 comments on An Introduction to Dynamic Meteorology (Volume 88) (International Geophysics (Volume 88)):

u/thesmokingclaw · 5 pointsr/meteorology

An Introduction to Dynamic Meteorology by James Holton is probably the most commonly used dynamics book. Another one that I really like is Mid-Latitude Atmospheric Dynamics: A First Course by Jonathan Martin.

As far as thermodynamics goes A First Course in Atmospheric Thermodynamics by Grant Petty is a good one.

u/blocku_atmos · 3 pointsr/Winterwx

Well then

https://www.amazon.com/Atmospheric-Science-Second-Introductory-International/dp/012732951X

That should get it done. If you want way more "headaches because I don't understand" math then this

https://www.amazon.com/Introduction-Dynamic-Meteorology-International-Geophysics/dp/0123848660

Those 2 are pretty standard for the field

u/Astromike23 · 2 pointsr/dataisbeautiful

> the NYT publishes so much BS

> the church of climate change

Yikes, your bias is showing. You might want to consider trying to learn atmospheric science from an actual textbook instead of letting right-wing blogs tell you what to think. I'd recommend this one or this one if your math is up to par, after which you could probably then move up to a graduate-level text like this one.

u/mherr77m · 1 pointr/askscience

The standard textbook that I think most of us have used in atmospheric dynamics classes is Holton but has a bit of steep learning curve, depending on your background. Another book, that I think is a bit better at easing you into the material is Wiley, and then theres Wallace & Hobbs which is more of an undergraduate book.