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Weather and Climate

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Chapter 24 Weather and Climate 24.1 The Atmosphere It s the protective layer that surrounds Earth It protects Earth from UV rays It moderates the temperature It ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Weather and Climate


1
Chapter 24
  • Weather and Climate

2
24.1 The Atmosphere
  • Its the protective layer that surrounds Earth
  • It protects Earth from UV rays
  • It moderates the temperature
  • It contains gases that are essential for life.

3
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4
Composition of Atmosphere
  • 78 is nitrogen
  • 21 is oxygen
  • The remaining 1 is a mixture of water vapor and
    other gases

5
Air Pressure
  • The force of gravity pulling the atmosphere
    toward Earth causes air pressure.
  • It is equal to 101,325 Newton per square meter at
    sea level
  • Pressure decreases as altitude increases
  • Density decreases as altitude increases

6
Barometer
  • Air pressure is measured with a barometer
  • A mercury barometer measures pressure at sea
    level at 760 mm Hg
  • It uses a column of Hg to measure pressure

7
Aneroid Barometer
  • More portable than a mercury barometer
  • It uses a metal chamber to measure pressure

8
Atmospheric layers
  • Temperature drops as altitude increase
  • Changes in temperatures define the layers in the
    atmosphere

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10
Troposphere
  • Lowest layer
  • Contains almost all of the water vapor and
    suspended particles
  • Weather happens here
  • 9 km at poles 12 km at the equator
  • Temperature decreases by 6.5 per km

11
Stratosphere
  • Next Layer
  • 12 km to 50 km above the earth
  • Temperature remains the same near the boundary of
    the troposphere then increase after about 20km
  • The ozone layer warms the upper stratosphere by
    absorbing UV radiation

12
Mesosphere
  • The layer above the stratosphere
  • 50km to 80km
  • Gets cooler the higher it gets
  • Most meteoroids burn up in this layer

13
Thermosphere
  • Outer most layer
  • Gets warmer as it gets further from earth
  • Starts at -90C and goes to 1000C
  • It has no upper boundary but instead gradually
    enters outer space

14
Ionosphere
  • Not a layer but instead a region of charged
    particles that covers the thermosphere
  • AM radio waves bounce back to earth from the
    ionosphere
  • Aurora is a colorful display at night occurs when
    charged particles from the sun are attracted to
    Earths Magnetic poles

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16
24.2 The Sun and the Season
17
Rotation
  • Spinning of Earth on its axis
  • Takes 24 hours

18
Revolution
  • The movement of one body in space around another
  • Earths movement around the sun
  • Takes 365 days

19
Latitude Zones
20
The Season
  • Earth is on a tilt of 23.5 N
  • It is the cause of the season
  • Seasons are NOT caused by the distance from the
    sun. In fact, the Earth is closest to the sun
    during winter in the Northern hemisphere

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22
Solstices
  • Occurs when the Sun is directly overhead at 23.5
    N and 23.5 S
  • Northern hemisphere it occurs on June 21st
  • Daylight hours are longest in the northern
    hemisphere and shortest in the southern
    hemisphere
  • December 21st is the winter solstice and the
    reverse occurs

23
Equinoxes
  • Days are about equal darkness and light
  • Occurs approximately half way between solstices
  • Neither hemisphere is tilted toward the sun
  • Vernal equinox occurs on March 21
  • Autumnal equinox occurs September 22

24
24.3 Solar Energy and Winds
  • Most of the energy that heats the troposphere is
    radiated from Earth
  • The greenhouse effect reflects that energy back
    toward the Earth

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26
Wind
  • Caused by differences in air pressure
  • Differences in air pressure caused by unequal
    heating of Earths surface
  • Warm air expands and rises
  • Cooler air is denser and moves to take its place

27
Local Winds
  • Wind that occurs in a small area
  • Caused by unequal heating in a small area
  • Sea breezes are an example

28
Global Winds
  • Winds that blow in specific direction
  • Move in bands called convection bands
  • Examples are trade winds, westerlies and polar
    easterlies

29
  • The rotation of the Earth causes the winds to
    turn Coriolis effect

30
Monsoons
  • Characterized by reversal in weather over a large
    region for a large amount of time.

31
Jet Stream
  • Fast moving stream of air that occur because of
    great differences in air pressure that develop at
    high altitudes

32
24.4 Water in the Atmosphere
  • Humidity amount of water vapor in the air
  • Relative humidity is the ratio of the amount of
    water vapor in the air
  • Expressed in percentage
  • Cooler air holds less water vapor than warm air
  • Dew point is the temperature at which water
    condenses

33
Cloud Formation
  • Form as warm, moist air rises and water vapor
    condenses in the atmosphere
  • Must have solid suspended particles to form
  • When water vapor is cooled below its dew point,
    water vapor condenses onto these particles

34
Precipitation
  • Rain, sleet, snow, hail, and freezing rain
  • Rain forms in nimbostratus clouds or cumulonimbus
    clouds
  • Hail is ice of more than 5 mm in diameter
  • Sleet is ice smaller than 5mm
  • Freezing rain is rain that freezes after it hits
    the surface

35
24.5 Weather Patterns
  • Consists of
  • Warm Fronts
  • Stationary Fronts
  • Occluded Fronts
  • cold Fronts

36
Air Masses
  • Large body of air that covers a large area and
    has uniform properties
  • They are classified by how they are formed over
    land or water and the latitude where they form

37
Fronts
  • After air masses form, they move
  • When they move they meet other air masses and
    form a front
  • Cold front
  • Warm front
  • Stationary front
  • Occluded front

38
Cold Fronts
  • Fronts when a cold air mass overtakes a warm air
    mass
  • Produces cumulus and cumulonimbus clouds
  • Produces severe thunderstorms, precipitation, and
    strong winds

39
Warm Fronts
  • Occurs when a warm air mass overtakes a cold air
    mass
  • Stratus clouds forms
  • May have a steady rain, may have some
    thunderstorms
  • Temperature rises after the front passes

40
Stationary Fronts
  • Occur when two unlike fronts meet but do not
    overtake one or the other
  • May results in clouds and steady rain or snow for
    several days

41
Occluded Fronts
  • Forms when a warm air mass is caught between two
    cooler air masses.
  • The cooler masses cut the warm air mass off from
    the ground. The warm air rises and cools
  • Results in cloudy skies and precipitation

42
Cyclones
  • Low air pressure in the center
  • Rotates counterclockwise in the Northern
    Hemisphere
  • Doesnt stay in one place
  • Associated with strong winds and precipitation

43
Anticyclones
  • Center is a high air pressure
  • Rotate clockwise in the Northern hemisphere
  • Has clear skies, very little precipitation, and
    generally calm conditions

44
Storms
  • Thunderstorms
  • Tornadoes
  • Tropical Storms and Hurricanes

45
Thunderstorms
  • Small weather system that includes thunder and
    lightning
  • Accompanied by strong winds and heavy rain or
    hail
  • Occur when columns of air rise within a
    cumulonimbus cloud

46
Lightning
  • Sudden electrical discharge in the atmosphere
  • Positive charges accumulate at the top of the
    cloud, negative charges at the bottom
  • When there is enough difference in charge,
    lightning flashes

47
Thunder
  • Occurs from the expansion of gases that results
    from the extreme heat the released when lightning
    discharges
  • You hear thunder after you see lightning because
    light travels faster than sound

48
Tornadoes
  • A small but intense windstorm that is a rotating
    column of air that touches the ground
  • Usually occur at the leading edge of an advancing
    cold front
  • Occurs in a thunderstorm
  • Wind can reach 500 km/hr usually 150km/hr

49
Hurricanes
  • Cyclone that develop in the tropics
  • Hurricane is a large tropical cyclone with winds
    of at least 110 km/hr

50
24.6 Predicting the Weather
  • Meteorologists study Earths weather
  • They use
  • Doppler radar
  • Automated weather stations
  • Weather satellites
  • High- speed computer

51
Doppler Radar
  • Bounces radar waves off the clouds
  • Measure the frequency of the waves that return
  • Speed of the storm can be calculated

52
Weather Stations and Satellites
  • Have sensors that measure
  • Temperature
  • Precipitation
  • Winds speed
  • Direction

53
High Speed Computers
  • Used to predict weather
  • Accurate from 12 hrs to 3 days
  • Large weather systems 3-7 days
  • Difficult to predict beyond 7 days

54
Weather Maps
  • Temperatures
  • Sun, cloud symbols
  • Cloud cover
  • Drawings of rain or snow

55
Isotherm
  • Line on a map that connects points of equal air
    temperature

56
Isobar
  • A line on a map that connect points of equal air
    pressure

57
24.7 Climate
  • Long term- weather conditions
  • Natural
  • Ice Ages
  • El Nino
  • Caused by Humans
  • Global Warming

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59
Temperature
  • Latitude
  • Distance from large bodies of water
  • Ocean currents
  • altitude

60
Precipitation
  • Latitude
  • Distribution of air pressure systems
  • Global winds
  • Existence of a mountain barrier

61
desert
  • Receive less than 25 cm of rain per year
  • Can be hot or cold
  • Direction of prevailing winds

62
Natural Climate Change
  • Possible causes are
  • Variations in Earths orbit around the sun
  • Changes in the angle of Earths axis
  • Global levels of volcanic activity

63
El Nino
  • Occurs about every 3-8 years
  • The cold water upwelling fails to occur off the
    coast of Peru causing a warming tend

64
Global Warming
  • Possibly caused by human activities
  • Burning of fossil fuels raises CO2 levels
  • 1990s hottest decade on record
  • Hotter temperatures cause the oceans to swell
    which floods low lying areas causing many
    peoples homes to be flooded
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