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Moisture, Clouds, and Weather

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If you have a cold drink in the summer, water droplets form on the outside of ... When a cold air mass overtakes and mixes with a warm air mass ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Moisture, Clouds, and Weather


1
Moisture, Clouds, and Weather
  • Chapter 19

2
Climate and Weather
  • Climate is what you expect.
  • Weather is what you get.
  • -Robert A. Heinlein

What is the difference between the two?
3
Weather
  • Weather The state of the atmosphere
  • for a specific place
  • at a particular time
  • Weather Elements
  • 1) Temperature
  • 2) Pressure
  • 3) Humidity
  • 4) Wind
  • 5) Visibility
  • 6) Clouds
  • 7) Significant Weather

4
Moisture in the air
  • Water vapor molecules evaporate and enter air,
    mixing among the N2, O2, and other gases.
  • Humidity amount of water vapor in the air
  • Absolute humidity is mass of vapor in a given
    volume of air
  • Relative humidity is amount of water vapor in the
    air relative to the maximum it can hold at a
    given temperature

5
Moisture in the air
  • Relative Humidity is expressed as a percentage
  • What happens when the air holds all the moisture
    it can?
  • It is saturated, the Relative Humidity is
    at 100, and the water vapor condenses
  • Relative Humidity changes with temperature

6
Moisture in the air
  • As air cools, its relative humidity rises until
    reaching 100 and saturation.
  • You are familiar with this! If you have a cold
    drink in the summer, water droplets form on the
    outside of the can as the air right next to the
    glass is cooled.
  • The temperature at which saturation occurs is
    called the DEW POINT.

What is frost?
7
Cooling and Condensation
  • There are 3 atmospheric processes that cool air
    to its dew point
  • Radiation Cooling
  • Contact Cooling
  • Pressure Changes (adiabatic temperature changes)
  • -As air rises, it expands and cools

8
Adiabatic Temperature Changes
  • To compress air, you must do work on it (energy
    is added), and it gets warmer.
  • If the compressed air expands, it does work
    (energy is lost) and it cools.
  • Rising air performs work to expand, so it does
    work and cools adiabatically at a predictable
    rate, depending on its moisture content
  • Dry adiabatic lapse rate 10oC per 1000 meters
  • Wet adiabatic lapse rate 5-9oC per 1000 meters

Why does rising air expand?
9
Clouds
  • Clouds form when rising air cools to its dew
    point, causing water vapor to condense as visible
    water droplets or ice crystals

10
Rising air and Precipitation
  • There are 3 mechanisms that cause air to rise
  • Orographic Lifting

11
Rising air and Precipitation
  • 2. Frontal Wedging

12
Rising air and Precipitation
  • 3. Convection-Convergence

13
Clouds
  • Clouds are classified into a system that uses
    Latin words to describe the appearance of clouds
    as seen by an observer on the ground.
  • There are 3 basic shapse of clouds

14
Clouds
  • Cirrus clouds (curl of hair)
  • Form 20,000 to 50,000 feet
  • Made of ice crystals not water

15
Clouds
  • Stratus clouds (layer)
  • Horizontally layered (sheet-like)

16
Clouds
  • Cumulus (heap)

17
Clouds
  • The three basic shapes of clouds can be modified
    or combined, so there are many different types of
    clouds based ont he three basic shapes
  • Numbus (rain)
  • Altus (high)

18
Clouds
19
Precipitation
  • Rain
  • Tiny water droplets collide, coalesce, and form
    raindrops
  • Rain often starts as ice particles high int he
    atmosphere that melt as they fall
  • Sleet
  • Warm raindrops that freeze as they fall through a
    cold air mass
  • Snow Falling ice crystals that remain frozen
  • Hail
  • Made of concentric ice layers
  • Winds blow falling ice back up high into the
    clouds, allowing hailstones to grow

20
Pressure and Wind
  • Warm air rises....why?
  • The rising air creates a partial vacuum, so air
    flows in horizontally to replace it...this is
    WIND
  • Winds at the Earths surface always blow away from
    high pressure areas towards low pressure
  • Differential heating of the Earths surface is the
    ultimate cause of wind

21
Pressure and Wind
  • Winds are responses to differences in pressure
  • Wind speed is determined by the magnitude of the
    pressure difference, or the PRESSURE GRADIENT
  • How do we quantitatively show pressure on a map?

22
Pressure and Wind
  • Isobars lines of equal pressure

23
Jet Streams
  • Pressure gradients create winds at high and low
    elevations
  • Surface winds are slowed by friction, whereas
    winds at higher elevations are not
  • Therefore, winds at high elevations have much
    higher velocities than surface winds, and these
    winds are called jet streams
  • Jet streams are narrow bands of high-altitude
    wind

24
Air Masses
  • Air Mass - extremely large body of air whose
    temperature and humidity are fairly similar in
    any horizontal direction at any given altitude
  • In English a big blob of air that pretty much
    is the same throughout

25
Air Masses
  • Four Types (characterized by source region)
  • cP - continental polar (e.g., Canada)
  • cT - continental tropical (e.g., Brazil, Mexico)
  • mP - marine polar (e.g., Arctic Ocean)
  • mT - marine tropical (e.g., Caribbean)

26
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27
Fronts
  • Front - the transition zone between two air
    masses of different densities

28
Fronts
  • Four Types (characterized by what types of air
    are on either side, or what happened)
  • Cold Front
  • Warm Front
  • Stationary Front
  • Occluded Front

29
Cold Front
  • When a cold air mass replaces a warm air mass
  • Drawn as a blue line with triangles/shark teeth
  • Triangles point in the direction the front is
    moving
  • Therefore, colder air is behind the front and
    warmer air is in front of the front

30
Cold front
  • Can be associated with thunderstorms, severe
    weather
  • Cold air is heavier than warm, so it pushes
    conditionally unstable air upwards

31
Warm Front
  • When a warm air mass replaces a cold air mass
  • Drawn as a red line with half-circles
  • Half-circles point in the direction the front is
    moving
  • Therefore, warmer air is behind the front and
    colder air is in front of the front

32
Warm front
  • Overrunning - warm air is less dense than cold,
    so it gradually creeps up slope of cold air
  • Produces widespread precipitation, nothing too
    violent

33
How To Find Fronts
  • Sharp temperature change over a short distance
  • Changes in moisture content (i.e., dew point)
  • Change in wind direction
  • Pressure dip/pressure change
  • Clouds, precipitation

34
Stationary Front
  • Two different air masses, adjacent to each other,
    not advancing or retreating
  • Drawn with alternating blue/triangle and
    red/half-circle segments on opposite sides
  • Behind triangles is the cold air mass behind the
    half-circles is the warm air mass

35
Occluded Front
  • When a cold air mass overtakes and mixes with a
    warm air mass
  • Drawn with alternating purple triangles and
    half-circle segments on the same side

36
Occluded Front
  • Two Types
  • Warm-Occlusion
  • Cold-Occlusion

37
Upper Air Support The Big Picture
38
Cyclogenesis(or How To Make A Cyclone In 4 Easy
Steps!!!)
  • Mid-Latitude Cyclone - a cyclonic storm that
    most often forms in middle and high latitudes
  • Cyclone derives from that it turns cyclonically
    (CCW in the N. Hemisphere, CW in the S.
    Hemisphere)

39
Cyclogenesis(or How To Make A Cyclone In 4 Easy
Steps!!!)
40
Cyclogenesis(or How To Make A Cyclone In 4 Easy
Steps!!!)
  • Get a stationary front
  • Get a low in there to make it start turning
  • Get the cold front to wrap around (cold fronts
    move faster than warm fronts... UH OH!)
  • Cold front overtakes warm front (i.e., occluded
    front)

41
Thunderstorms
  • All thunderstorms require instability (potential)
    and lift. The lift is the mechanism that releases
    the instability.
  • Lift is produced by things such as....
  • Wind convergence
  • Convection
  • Oorgraphic lifting
  • Frontal boundaries

42
Thunderstorms
  • Three stages of a thunderstorm
  • Rising air condenses and forms cumulus clouds
  • Heat released by condensation warms the air in
    the cloud, producing violent convection and
    updrafts that keep water droplets and ice from
    falling
  • Eventually droplets and ice (hail) become too
    heavy and fall

43
  • Wind Shear effect generated by thunderstorms as
    warm air and cold air simultaneously rises and
    fall
  • May be a factor in tornado formation

44
Thunderstorms
  • Lightning two possible hypothesis for origin of
    lightning
  • charge separation caused by friction between ice
    and wind
  • Cosmic rays charge particles in atmosphere

45
Tornadoes
  • Most violent atmospheric disturbance
  • Extreme pressure difference ? extremely high
    winds
  • Visible because of water vapor, debris

46
Tornadoes
  • Winds may exceed several hundred km (miles) per
    hour, although most are much weaker (close to 100
    MPH)
  • Small (tenths of a km (mile) to a km (mile) wide)
  • Short lived (minute to few hours on ground, move
    48km/h (30 MPH)
  •  Associated with severe thunderstorms, formation
    process quite uncertain
  •  Often on back end (SW) of storm

47
Quiz
  • What causes wind at the Earths surface?
  • Name one type of cloud.
  • What is a front?
  • Bonus In what layer of the atmosphere does
    weather occur?

48
Break
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