Title: Living Things
1Weather Factors
- Table of Contents 5.1 5. 2
- Heat Transfer
- Water in the Atmosphere
- 5.1 Videos
- Brainpop-Temperature
- Heat Transmission Conduction, Convection, and
Radiation
2Vocabulary 5.1
- Atmosphere- The envelope of gases that surrounds
the planet. - Hydrosphere- The portion of the Earth that
consists of liquid water (oceans) - Weather- the condition of Earths atmosphere at a
particular time and place. - Temperature-how hot or cold something is measure
of average energy of motion of the particles of a
substance. - Thermal Energy-The total kinetic and potential
energy of all the particles of an object. - Thermometer-An instrument used to measure
temperature. - Heat-The transfer of thermal energy from a warmer
object to a cooler object. - Convection-The transfer of thermal energy by the
movement of a fluid. - Conduction-the transfer of thermal energy from
one particle of matter to another. - Convection Currents- the movement of a fluid,
caused by differences in temperature, that
transfers heat from one part of the fluid to
another.
3How is the Earth a System? Pg. 155
- Earth is a system made up of different parts.
- The atmosphere is the envelope of gases that
surround the planet. - The hydrosphere is made up of all the water on
Earth. - The atmosphere and hydrosphere constantly
interact. - For example, when energy from the sun warms the
gases in the atmosphere and the water in the
hydrosphere, the water evaporates and forms vapor
in the atmosphere. The vapor may form clouds and
then fall back to the surface of Earth as rain. - Weather is the condition of Earths atmosphere at
a particular time and place. - As the interactions between Earths parts change,
so does the weather.
4How is Temperature Measured? pg. 156
- All substances are made up of tiny particles
(atoms and molecules) that are constantly
moving. - The faster the particles move, the more energy
they have. - Thermal energy measures the total (potential and
kinetic) energy of motion in the particles of a
substance. - Temperature is the average amount of energy of
motion of each particle of a substance. - Air temperature is usually measured with
a thermometer. - A thermometer is a device that measures
temperature. - Temperature is measured in units called degrees.
- There are twoTemperature scales
- 1.) the Celsius scale 2.) the Fahrenheit scale.
5 Heat Transfer
Converting Units Temperature readings can be
converted from the Fahrenheit scale to the
Celsius scale using the following equation
6How is Heat Transferred? Pg. 158
- Heat is thermal energy (potential kinetic
energy)that is transferred from a hotter object
to a cooler one. - Heat is transferred in three ways
- Convection (fluids-liquids gases)
- Conduction (Heat transfer between 2
substances-direct contact) - Radiation (transfer of energy by
electromagnetic waves) - In Convection (H.T), Atoms and molecules in
fluids (liquids and gases) can move easily. As
they move, their energy moves with them. The
transfer of heat by the movement of a fluid is
called convection. - Convection
- The transfer of thermal energy (potential
kinetic energy) by the movement of a fluid.
7Heat TransferConvection, Conduction, and
Radiation
8 How is Heat Transferred? Pg. 158
- Heating the Troposphere
- Conduction- Is the transfer of heat between two
substances that are in direct contact . - When a fast moving molecule bumps into a slower
moving molecule, the faster one transfers some of
its energy to the slower one. The closer together
the molecules are in a substance, the better they
conduct heat. - Conduction works best in-- some solids, such as
metals - but not as well-- in liquids and gases.
- Radiation -is the direct transfer of energy by
electromagnetic waves. Most of the heat that you
feel from the sun travels to you as infrared
radiation, which you cannot see but can feel.
9Heat Transfer
Heat Transfer Heat transfer occurs when a warm
radiator heats a room. What type of heat transfer
could keep the paper in the air?
10How is Heat Transferred? Pg. 159
- The troposphere is the lowest layer in Earths
atmosphere. - Radiation, conduction, and convection work
together to heat the troposphere. - During a sunny day the land gets warmer than the
air. But because air doesnt conduct heat well,
only the first few meters of the troposphere are
heated by conduction. When air at ground level
warms, its molecules spread out, making it less
dense (component parts closely compacted
together). - Cooler denser air sinks toward the surface,
forcing the warmer air to rise. The upward
movement of warm air and the downward movement of
cool air form convection currents. - Heat is transferred mostly by convection within
the troposphere.
11Chapter 5.2
12Vocabulary ch. 5.2
- Water Cycle-- The continual movement of water
among Earths atmosphere, oceans, and land
surface through evaporation, condensation, and
precipitation. - Evaporation --The process by which molecules at
the surface of a liquid absorb enough energy to
change to a gas. - Precipitation Any form of water that falls from
clouds and reaches Earths surface as rain, snow,
sleet, or hail.
13How Does Water Move through the Atmosphere
- The Water Cycle
- The movement of water through the Earths
systems. This movement is driven by the suns
energy gravity
14Steps of the Water Cycle pg. 162
- Water evaporates- (water vapor enters the
atmosphere) - Process where molecules at the surface of a
liquid absorbs (gains) energy and changes to
gaseous state. Water evaporates from oceans,
rivers, lakes, soil, puddles, and even your skin! - Transpiration- Takes place when plants draws
water from the ground and then the water is given
off through the leaves. - Condensation (Condensation is the reverse of
evaporation it is the process by which water
vapor becomes liquid water.) - After water evaporates, warm air carries
molecules upward (air is colder as it rises.)
Water vapor condenses into liquid water. Droplets
of water clump around solid particles in the air,
forming clouds.
15Steps of the Water Cycle
- Precipitation- Water condenses, droplets grow
larger becoming heavier so that they fall back to
Earth. - Types of precipitation
- rain, ______, ______, and ________.
- Most precipitation falls into oceans
- Precipitation that falls on land, mostly
evaporates - Precipitation is the source for fresh water
- Water that seeps into the ground is called-
groundwater. This water flows back to the ocean,
and the process starts all over again. - Runoff- water that remains on the surface, runs
off into streams and lakes
16Weather and the Water Cycle pg. 163
- The water cycle helps weather patterns and
climate. - The suns energy changes the amount of water
vapor in the atmosphere. - Depending location, certain areas such as
equator, have more condensation and
______________. - Areas that have more condensation experience
more____________ and precipitation. - Areas that have less water vapor, have fewer
clouds and less precipitation.
17The Water Cycle
18Water in the Atmosphere
The Water Cycle What are the processes in the
water cycle? Runoff, Precipitation,
condensation, Evaporation, transpiration
19Water in the Atmosphere
The Driest Place on Earth There are places in the
Atacama Desert where a single drop of rain has
never been measured.
20X