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METEOROLOGY

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Title: METEOROLOGY


1
METEOROLOGY
  • GEL-1370

2
Chapter Six
  • Air Pressure and Wind

3
Goal for this Chapter
  • We are going to learn answers to the following
    questions
  • How and Why Atmospheric Pressure Varies?
  • What forces influence atmospheric motions at
    aloft and surface?
  • How the Wind should flow in a particular region?
  • What is pressure gradient?
  • What is Coriolis Force?
  • What is Geostrophic and Gradient Wind?
  • Why in Northern Hemisphere winds flow clockwise
    around regions of high pressure?
  • Various methods instruments to measure wind
    speed and direction?

4
Atmospheric Pressure
  • Air pressure Measure of mass of air above a
    given level
  • Atmospheric Pressure decreases with altitude, as
    there are fewer molecules above us
  • Temperature, pressure and density of air are
    related to each other
  • For a given volume of air, adding more to the
    column will increase the surface air pressure
    (temp constant) if we remove air from the
    column, the pressure will decrease
  • If we have two identical column, one undergoes
    cooling and other warming, the one that cools
    becomes more dense one that warms, becomes less
    dense

5
Air density remains constant with height when
more air is stuffed (at same temp), in to the
column, pressure increases
6
Shorter column of cold air taller column of
warm air exert same pressure aloft cold air is
associated with low pressure
7
Atmospheric Pressure contd.
  • IT TAKES A SHORTER COLUMN OF COLD, MORE DENSE AIR
    TO EXERT THE SAME SURFACE PRESSURE AS A TALLER
    COLUMN OF WARM, LESS DENSE AIR
  • Atmospheric pressure decreases more rapidly with
    elevation in the cold column of air in the
    warmer, less denser air (associated with high atm
    pressure), this pressure does not decrease as
    rapidly with height, as there are fewer molecules
  • Horizontal difference in temperature creates a
    horizontal difference in pressure pressure
    gradient pressure difference creates Pressure
    Gradient Force that causes air to move from high
    to low pressure

8
Atmospheric pressure and measurement
  • Heating/Cooling of air leads to horizontal
    variations in pressure that cause the air to
    move net accumulation of air above the surface
    causes the surface air pressure to rise, whereas
    a decrease in the amount of air --- pressure to
    fall
  • Measuring Air Pressure
  • Air Pressure Force exerted by the air
    molecules/area
  • Barometers Instruments that detect measure
    pressure changes
  • Units Bar --- millibars (mb) --- Hectopascal
    (hPa)
  • 1013.25 mb 1013.25 hPa 29.92 in. Hg

9
Atmospheric pressure in inches of Hg mb
10
Tinkering with Gas Law
  • Relationship between temperature, pressure, and
    density is Pressure constant X temperature X
    density
  • For constant temperature, P a density
  • For nearly the same temperature and elevation,
    air above a region of surface high pressure is
    more dense than air above a region of low
    pressure
  • For constant pressure, T a 1/density
  • For a given atmospheric pressure, air that is
    cold is more dense than air that is warm

11
Hg barometer height of Hg is a measure of
atmospheric pressure
12
Barometers
  • Aneroid barometer No fluid an aneroid cell
    (small, flexible metal piece), air is partially
    removed --- small changes in external air
    pressure cause the cell to expand or contract
    size of the cell is calibrated to measure
    pressure

13
Barometer contd.
  • Higher the reading --- more likely clear weather
    lower the reading --- inclement weather
  • Surface high pressure areas are associated with
    sinking air and normally fair weather surface
    low-pressure areas are associated with rising air
    and usually cloudy, wet weather
  • A steady rise in atmospheric pressure usually
    indicates clearing weather or fair weather
    steady drop in atmospheric pressure often signals
    the approach of a storm with inclement weather
  • Altimeter (calibrated to indicate altitude) and
    barograph (recording aneroid barometer) are two
    types of aneroid barometers

14
Pressure Readings
  • Problems associated with reading Hg column (in
    obtaining air pressure) are
  • Temperature (expands when heated contracts when
    cooled) Corrections are made as if they were
    read at the same temp.
  • Changes in Gravity Earth mass distribution leads
    to differences must be corrected
  • Instrument Error Mainly due to the surface
    tension of Hg against the glass tube
  • The corrected pressure is called Station
    Pressure
  • Pressure changes vertically Monitoring changes
    in horizontal pressures that we normalize with
    respect to altitude (sea level pressure)
  • Atmos. pressure decreases 10 mb/100 m (0.1mb/m)

15
A Recording Barograph
16
Cities A,B,C,D at 4 elevations with different
station pressures b) sea level pressures of 4
cities on a sea level chart c) isobars drawn on
the chart at 4 mb intervals
17
Surface Map
  • Isobars do not pass through each point, but with
    the values interpolated from the data given on
    the chart
  • With isobars plotted, the chart is called sea
    level pressure chart or simply Surface Map
  • When weather data are plotted are in this map, it
    becomes Surface Weather Map
  • Surface and Upper-Air Charts
  • Hs Centers of high pressure (also called
    anticyclones)
  • Ls Centers of low pressure (also known as
    depressions or mid-latitude depressions or
    extra-tropical cyclones) they form in the
    middle latitudes, outside of the tropics

18
Surface Map showing areas of high low pressure
solid lines are isobars at 4 mb intervals arrows
wind direction winds blow across the isobars
19
Surface Upper-Air charts contd.
  • The upper-air map is a constant pressure chart
    --- constructed to show height variations along a
    constant pressure (isobaric surface) Isobaric
    maps
  • Contour lines connect points of equal elevation
    above sea level
  • Contour lines of low height represent regions of
    lower pressure lines of high height represent
    region of higher pressure
  • Contour lines decrease from south to north
    isotherms (dotted line) shows north is colder
    than south --- cold air aloft is associated with
    low pressure
  • Contour lines bend turn indicating elongated
    highs (ridges, warmer air) depressions
    (troughs, colder air)

20
Upper-level 500 mb map for the same day solid
lines contour lines in meters above sea level
dashed linesisotherms (C) wind directions are
parallel to the contour lines
21
Upper-air charts contd.
  • The winds on the 500-mb chart tend to flow
    parallel to the contour lines on a wavy
    west-to-east direction
  • Surface maps describe where the centers of high
    low pressures are found and winds and weather
    associated with these systems
  • Upper-air charts are important for weather
    forecast upper-level winds determine the
    movement of surface air pressure systems, as well
    as whether these surface systems will intensify
    or weaken

22
Less dense air in the south cold air in the
north Height of the pressure surface varies
Changes in elevation of a constant pressure
surface shown as a contour lines on a isobaric map
23
Forces that influences the wind
  • Newtons Laws of Motion
  • First Law An object will continue to rest or its
    uniform motion unless it is compelled by an
    external force
  • Second Law F ma (Acceleration of an object is
    caused by all the forces acting on it) Force
    acting on it is proportional to acceleration
    (Acceleration is the speeding-up, the slowing
    down)
  • Forces that affect the horizontal movement of air
    are
  • Pressure Gradient Force
  • Coriolis Force
  • Centripetal Force
  • Frictional Force

24
Pressure at the bottom of each tank is a weight
of water above pressure at the bottom of A gt
pressure at the bottom of B greater the
difference higher the force
25
Pressure Gradient Force
  • Pressure Gradient Pressure Difference/distance
  • Pressure Gradient Force is the force that causes
    the wind to blow closely spaced isobars on a
    weather chart indicate steep pressure gradients,
    strong forces, and high winds
  • Pressure gradient force (PGF) is directed from
    higher toward lower pressure at right angles to
    the isobars
  • Magnitude of this force is directly related to
    the pressure gradient

26
PGF between 1 2 is 4 mb/100km PGA Net force
directed from higher toward lower pressure
27
Closer isobars--- greater pressure gradient---
stronger PGF--- greater the wind speed length of
arrows indicate magnitude of PGF
28
Surface Weather Map
  • Dark Grey lines Isobars in mb
  • A deep low with a central pressure of 972 mb
  • Distance along X-X is 500 km
  • Difference in pressure between X X is 32 mb
  • Pressure gradient 0.064 mb/km
  • Tightly packed isobars along the green line
    associated with northwesterly winds of 40 knots
  • Wind speeds are indicated by barbs and flags ?
    would be a wind from the northwest at 10 knots
  • Solid blue line is a cold front solid red line
    is a warm front heavy dashed line is a trough

29
Surface weather map
30
Coriolis Force
  • It is fictitious force resulting from the
    rotation of the earth
  • To an observer on the earth, objects moving in
    any direction (north, south, west, east) are
    deflected to the right of their intended path in
    the Northern hemisphere and to the left of their
    intended path in the Southern Hemisphere.
  • The amount of deflection depends upon
  • Rotation of the earth
  • Latitude (0 at equator and maximum at the poles)
  • Objectss speed

31
If we watch from above, the ball moves on a
straight path for anyone in platform B, the ball
appears to deflect to the right of its intended
path
32
All freely moving objects (ocean currents,
aircraft, artillery projectiles, air molecules)
seem to deflect from a straight-line path it is
greater at the poles and 0 at the equator
33
Geostrophic (Earth turning) Wind
  • Why winds aloft more or less parallel to the
    isobars or contour lines?
  • Consider air at 1-km above the earths surface
    the PGE acts on the air accelerating it northward
    toward lower pressure--- when the air begins to
    move, CF deflects the air toward its right,
    curving its path ---as the speed of air increases
    (2,3,4) CF increases bending the wind more CF
    increases with latitude at point 5, net force
    0--- wind flows in a straight path, parallel to
    the isobars at a constant speed This flow of
    air is called Geostrophic Wind
  • Coriolis acceleration 2 w x v 2 wv cos q (q
    latitude w angular velocity of rotation of
    earth v vertical velocity of air mass)

34
At 1-km above earths surface, the isobaric lines
are evenly spaced (constant PGF) parcel of air
left at 1 two forces act-PGF and CF CF
increases with lati.
35
Isobars and contours on a upper-level chart when
widely spread, flow is weak when narrowly
spaced, flow is stronger increase in winds
results in a stronger CF which balances larger PGF
36
Geostrophic wind contd.
  • When the flow is purely geostrophic, the isobars
    (or contour lines) are straight and evenly spaced
    and wind speed is constant the speed of
    geostrophic wind is directly related to the
    pressure gradient
  • Curved Winds Around Lows Highs Aloft
  • The counter clockwise flow of air around Lows
    (known as cyclones) is anticyclonic flow
  • Clockwise flow of air around a high or
    anticyclone is called anticyclonic flow
  • In Figure a) at point 1, PGF accelerates the air
    inward toward the center of the low and the CF
    deflects the moving air to its right, until the
    air is moving parallel to the isobars at position
    2

37
Winds and related forces around areas of low and
high pressure above the friction level in the
Northern Hemisphere
38
Curved winds around lows and highs aloft contd.
  • If the wind were geostrophic, at position 3 the
    air would move northward parallel to
    straight-line isobars at a constant speed
  • Gradient Wind Wind that blows at a constant
    speed parallel to curved isobars above the level
    of frictional influence
  • Centripetal acceleration Force directed towards
    the center
  • Winds on Upper-level charts On the upper-level
    500-mb chart, the winds tend to parallel the
    contour lines wind is geostrophic where it blows
    in a straight path parallel to evenly spaced
    lines it is gradient where it blows parallel to
    curved contour lines

39
Winds on upper-level charts
  • When the lines are closer together, winds are
    stronger
  • Where the lines are farther apart, the winds are
    weaker
  • Meridional Flow When wind blows in a north-south
    trajectory
  • Zonal Flow Winds blowing in a west-to-east
    direction
  • Winds aloft in middle and high latitudes
    generally flow from west to east shorter Time of
    Flight from SFO to NY than NY to SFO
  • Surface Winds
  • Winds on a surface weather map do not blow
    exactly parallel to the isobars instead, they
    cross the isobars, moving from higher to lower
    pressure the angle at which the wind crosses the
    isobars varies, but averages about 30. The
    reason for this behavior is friction

40
Upper-level 500-mb showing wind direction solid
gray lines are contours in meters AMSL dashed
red lines are isotherms in degree C
41
Surface winds contd.
  • Friction Layer The atmospheric layer that is
    influenced by friction (planetary boundary layer)
    usually extends upward to an altitude near 1000m
    above the surface
  • In Fig a) wind aloft is blowing at a level above
    the frictional influence of the ground the wind
    is geostrophic and blows parallel to the
    isobars with the PGF on its left is balanced by
    the CF on its right
  • Near the surface, friction reduces the wind
    speed, which in turn reduces the coriolis force
    weaker CF no longer balances the PGF and the wind
    blows across the isobars toward lower pressure

42
Effect of surface friction is to slow down the
wind near the ground, the wind crosses the
isobars blows toward lower pressure this
produces an outflow of air around a high and an
inflow around a low
43
Surface weather map showing isobars and winds in
December in South America b) boxed area shows
the idealized flow around surface-pressure
systems in the Southern Hemisphere
44
Surface winds Vertical air motions
  • In the Northern hemisphere, surface winds blowing
    counterclockwise and into a low they flow
    clockwise and out of a high
  • In the Southern hemisphere, winds blow clockwise
    and inward around surface lows, counterclockwise
    and outward around surface highs
  • Vertical Air Motions As air moves inward toward
    the center of a low-pressure area, it must go
    somewhere. Since the converging air cannot go
    into the ground, it slowly rises and begins to
    spread apart
  • The vertical motions several cm/s (1.5 km/day)

45
Winds and air motions associated with surface
highs and lows in the Northern Hemisphere
46
Vertical motion contd.
  • Hydrostatic Equilibrium When the upward-directed
    pressure gradient force is exactly balanced by
    the downward force of gravity, equilibrium exists
  • Hydrostatic equilibrium does not exist in violent
    thunderstorms and tornadoes where the air shows
    vertical acceleration

47
Measurement of Wind Speeds
  • Onshore Wind Wind blowing from the water onto
    land
  • Offshore Wind Wind blowing from land to water
  • Upslope Wind Air moving uphill
  • Downslope Wind Air moving downhill
  • Wind Direction calm is zero 360 is North
  • Prevailing Wind Wind direction most often
    observed during a given time period prevailing
    winds greatly affect the climate of a region
  • In the Northeastern half of the US, the
    prevailing wind in winter is northwest in
    summer, it is southwest
  • Wind Rose Indication of the percentage of time
    the wind blows from different direction

48
Onshore and offshore wind
49
Wind direction expressed in degrees
50
Unprotected (from wind) trees are sculpted into
flag trees
51
Wind Instruments
  • Wind Vane Old, yet reliable, weather instrument
    to determine wind direction arrow always points
    into the wind direction
  • Anemometer An instrument to measure wind speed
  • Aerovane An instrument used to indicate both
    wind speed and direction
  • Wind information can be obtained during a
    radiosonde observation (temp, pressure
    humidity) instrument in the ground constantly
    tracks the balloon, measuring its vertical and
    horizontal angles as well as height above the
    ground (up to 30 km or so)
  • Wind speed direction can be obtained from
    satellites

52
A wind vane a cup anemometer
53
Wind rose represents of time the wind blew from
different direction during January (10 yrs)
prevailing wind is NW least frequency is NE
54
The aerovane (skyvane)
55
Wind measurements contd.
  • Satellite track the movement of clouds ---
    direction of cloud movement indicates wind
    direction horizontal distance the cloud has
    moved for a given time is a measure of wind speed
  • Doppler Radar is used to obtain a vertical
    profile of wind speed direction upto an
    altitude of 16 km or so such a profile is called
    wind sounding and the radar is called wind
    profiler
  • The amount of force exerted by the wind over an
    area increases as the square of the wind
    velocity when the wind velocity doubles, the
    force it exerts on an object goes up by a factor
    of four

56
Wind Power
  • Wind Turbines produce energy in winds as low as 5
    knots and as high as 45 knots
  • In 1997, over 15,000 wind machines were
    generating over 3.5 billion KWH (1 of the total
    need)
  • Can we go completely Wind Power-based, rather
    than solar, nuclear, fossil-fuel based????
  • YES

57
chapter 6- Summary
  • Variation of air pressure with altitude
  • Barometer, anemometer,
  • Relationship between atmospheric pressure
    gravity
  • Station pressure
  • Surface weather map, 500-mb contour map
  • Wind direction in upper-level chart ridge,
    trough
  • Acceleration, Newtons laws, friction,
    gravitational force
  • Pressure gradient, Pressure gradient force
  • Coriolis force, variation with latitude
  • Zonal Meridional flow
  • Geostrophic wind, Gradient wind, Offshore
    onshore winds
  • Hydrostatic equilibrium
  • Wind rose, Wind profiler
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