Cyanometer

Cyanometer

App Report, Market and Ranking Data
category
price
$0.99
Reviews
5 (1)
United States United States
Description
The original cyanometer was invented by the Genevan physicist and Alpine explorer Horace-Bénédict de Saussure (* 17 February 1740 in Conches; † 22 January 1799) in 1789. It is an instrument for measuring 'blueness', specifically the colour intensity of blue sky. With the measurement it is possible to draw conclusions from the constitution of the atmosphere: the bluer the sky the less the water vapor. Saussures cyanometer consisted out of 53 parts of a circular ring ranging from white over different grades of blue to black (Saussure used Prussian blue). Saussure used his cyanometer for measurements in Geneva, Chamonix und on the Mont Blanc.
Alexander von Humboldt used a cyanometer on his expedition to America (1799 - 1804).

You can use our Cyanometer in three modes: The modern scale uses distinct grades of blue starting with clear white up to black. The Saussure scale shall give an idea about the colors from Saussures original cyanometer. With the user defined scale own scans of blue skies can be added to an own colored circular ring - an own cyanometer.
Each scan is saved inside the app containing information about date, time and locality. So it is possible to compare scans of blue skies from different locations.

Privacy notice: No data will be saved or processed outside the app.
Category Ranking
Not enough information to display the data.
Review Breakdown
Not enough information to display the data.
Screenshots
Reviews

It's just a dfferent way to access the camera.

I had hoped and assumed that the app would use the blue in the image area and automatically suggest a number matching what shade of blue was visible. It does not. The user picks a number on the round scale then presses the shutter button, saving some basic info and your selected blue number with the image. Not sure there's a wide audience for this.

ostmanTue, Feb 21, 2023
United StatesUnited States

My sky, your sky

I love this app. Since reading about Humboldt’s Cyanometer in “The Invention of Nature” I’ve been a bit obsessed with the idea of measuring the blueness of the sky. I understand the blueness can be a measure of water content, but there is something also poetic and uniting about the cyanometer: we all share the same sky, yet it is for each of us a different sky. Use this app and your sky will never be simply blue again.

Noir HawaiiSun, Apr 26, 2020
United StatesUnited States
Download & Revenue
DOWNLOAD 75.2KMar 2024Worldwide
REVENUEN/AMar 2024Worldwide
download revenue
About
Bundle Id
Cyanometer
Min Os. Version
10.0
Release Date
Thu, Aug 29, 2019
Update Date
Thu, Jun 11, 2020
Content Rating
Has IMessage
No
Support Watch
No
Support Siri
No
File Size
22.12MB
Has Game Center
No
Family Sharing
No
Support Passbook
No
Supported Languages
English, German
What's New
version
1.1
updated
3 years ago
Fixes for iOS13/SDK 13.
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