Title: Wind, Air Masses, and Fronts
1Wind, Air Masses, and Fronts
2Pressure Gradient
- Wind
- Horizontal movement of air across Earth's surface
- Movement from high to low pressure
- Vector force-both direction and velocity
- Also known as pressure gradient force
- Pressure gradient
- Change in air pressure over specific distance
3Planetary Winds
- Large-scale wind patterns flowing across Earth
- Result of unequal distribution of insolation
- Caused by large pressure differences near
surfaces - Result of unequal distribution of heat
- Equator-90-degree angle causes rapid heating
- Warm air rises because of lower density
4Planetary Winds (continued)
- Also known as area of convergence
- Causes areas of low pressure near equator
- Air begins to cool as it expands
- Air becomes more dense, sinks to Earth
- Cool, dense sinking air returns to Earth
- At 30 degrees North and South latitude
- Begins to form high pressure at surface
5Planetary Winds (continued)
- Called areas of divergence
- Cool dense air pushing forward
- Causes area to spread apart or diverge
- Causes large-scale convection cell-Hadley cell
- Low pressure at equator
- High pressure 30 degrees North and South
- Large-scale planetary winds develop
6Planetary Winds (continued)
- If one maps pressure centers on a map
- Plot wind direction and air flow
- Flow directly from north or from south
- Occurrence of easterly and westerly winds
- Result of Earth's rotation
- Called the Coriolis Effect
- Cause right or left movements, depending on
hemisphere
7Pressure Systems
- Mass of air with well-defined pressure
- center
- Pressure center
- Area low/high pressure in air mass
- Wind from high pressure center travels
- outward
- Clockwise pattern in the North Hemisphere
- Coriolis effect causes deflection to the right
- Called an anticyclone
8Pressure Systems (continued)
- Wind from low pressure area spirals inward
- Counterclockwise pattern in the Northern
Hemisphere - Known as a cyclone
9Mesoscale Winds
- Also called regional winds
- Smaller scale interactions of changing pressure
- Example-land and sea breeze
- Insolation received on a hot day
- Land next to large body of water
- Heats rapidly-hot air forms near surface
- Rises and becomes dense
10Mesoscale Winds (continued)
- Cooler air over water next to land
- Cooler, more dense air forms high pressure
- Result
- High pressure over cool water
- Low pressure over warm land
- Also called a sea breeze
- Blows cool air toward the coast
11Mesoscale Winds (continued)
- As sun goes down surface cools rapidly
- Cool air forms over land
- Temperature of water stays same
- Air over water remains warm
- Temperature of the land cools
- High pressure over land, low over water
- Causes a land breezes
12The Jet Stream
- Forms high in the atmosphere in tropopause
- As cool air descends
- Belt of high winds develops
- Called jet stream
- 6 to 9 miles up
- Over subtropical and polar highs
- 200 miles wide and less than 1 mile thick
13The Jet Stream (continued)
- Over United States
- Travels west to east
- Causes weather to move westward to eastward
- Subtropical jet stream
- Over lower latitudes
- Moves warm tropical air and hurricanes
- Along east coast of United States
14Air Mass
- Large body of moving air in the troposphere
- Similar temperature, pressure, and moisture
- Derives characteristics from source regions
- Geographical areas give an air mass its qualities
- Higher altitudes-cooler temperature
- Near equator-warmer temperature
15Air Mass (continued)
- Atmospheric moisture is related to source region
- Over the ocean-higher atmospheric moisture
- Over continents-considered dry
16Source Regions and Classification of Air Masses
- Five categories
- Continental polar air mass
- Over land near poles
- Cool, dry air
- Maritime polar air mass
- Near poles over ocean
- Cool, moist air-cold winter rains
17Source Regions and Classification of Air Masses
(continued)
- Continental tropical air masses
- Over land near equator
- Warm, dry air
- Maritime tropical air masses
- Over the ocean near equator
- Warm, humid air
- Often associated with hurricanes
18Source Regions and Classification of Air Masses
(continued)
- Arctic air mass
- Extremely cold and dry air
- North of 60 degrees north latitude
- Ice fields of Siberia, Greenland, and Arctic
Ocean - Can bring cold and dry weather
- Called an arctic express
19Fronts
- One air mass contacts with another
- Each has different characteristics of
- Temperature
- Barometric pressure
- Moisture
- Causes characteristic weather unique to each front
20Front (continued)
- Cold front
- Advancing cooler front contacts slow warm front
- Causes adiabatic cooling
- Cooling of rising air by expansion
- Air temperature meets dew point
- Clouds form-cumulonimbus
- Heavy precipitation and thunderstorms
21Front (continued)
- Fast moving cold fronts cause intense
thunderstorms - Called a squall line
- Slower moving cold front causes showers
- Shift in wind direction caused by cold front
- From southwest to northwest
- Change in pressure also occurs
- High pressure often occurs
22Front (continued)
- Warm front
- Warm air mass contacts slower cold air mass
- Form high, then mid-level, then low clouds
- Advancing warm front- clouds gradually thicken
- Cause light precipitation
- If snow, accumulations can be heavy
- Fog may also form along the boundary
23Front (continued)
- Wind shifts from southeast to southwest
- Less dense warm air
- Replaced by cooler, denser air
- Brings a change in barometric pressure- drops
- Occluded front
- Rapid cold front
- Moves under slower warm front- causes uplift
24Front (continued)
- Results in widespread precipitation
- Can be intense or sustained
- Winds shift from southeast to northwest
- Some fronts are stationary
- Cold and warm next to each other
- Create clear weather and few clouds
- Eventually become a cold or warm front
25Mid-latitude Cyclones
- Form in Northern Hemisphere around low-pressure
systems - Counterclockwise inward rotation
- When cold air mass
- Moves behind slower warm air masses
- Both systems centered around spiraling low
pressure - Wide band of precipitation result
26Mid-latitude Cyclones (continued)
- As system intensifies
- A comma cloud forms
- Names comes from its shape
- Cold front overtakes the warm front
- Develops an occluded front
- Pressure weakens and cyclone breaks apartmoves
out over the Atlantic Ocean