Download Dew, frost and fogs

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts
no text concepts found
Transcript
Dew, frost and fogs
Review of last lecture:
Components of global water cycle
• Ocean water
• Land soil moisture, rivers, snow cover, ice
sheet and glaciers
• Sea ice
• Atmosphere water vapor, clouds, precipitation
• Water in biosphere (including human beings)
Water (H2O ) is unique on earth because it
can exist in all 3 states (phases)
• An H2O molecule
• 3 states (gas, liquid, solid)
depending on how the molecules
are connected together
• Can change from any state to
any other state. Latent heat is
consumed or released in a
phase change
e.g. Evaporation -> liberation of
water molecules, requires energy
Evaporation and Condensation
• Molecules escape into the overlying volume
as water vapor during evaporation. Energy
must be available at the water surface.
Water vapor increases in air as surface
water evaporates.
• Water vapor molecules randomly collide
with the water surface and bond with
adjacent molecules during condensation.
• There is an equilibrium between
evaporation and condensation during
saturation. Upon saturation, evaporation
rate equals condensation rate.
Sublimation and Deposition
• Water vapor (gas) can change directly into ice or snow (solid) during
deposition.
• Ice or snow (solid) can turn directly into water vapor (gas) during
sublimation.
• There is an equilibrium between deposition and sublimation during
saturation. Upon saturation, deposition rate equals sublimation rate.
Indices of Water Vapor Content
•
•
Humidity: amount of water vapor in air
Humidity expressed in a number of ways  Indices
1. Vapor Pressure: the partial pressure exerted by water vapor.
Saturation vapor pressure (SVP) – maximum amount of vapor
that can exist at a given temperature, increase w/ Tair
2.
Absolute Humidity: density of water vapor expressed in g/m3
3.
Specific Humidity: mass of water vapor (g) per mass of air (kg)
(in g/kg).
Saturation specific humidity (qs): highest specific humidity for a
given temperature and pressure
mv
q=
mv + md
4.
Mixing Ratio: amount of water vapor (g) relative only to mass of
dry air (kg).
Saturation mixing ratio: maximum mixing ratio
r=
5.
Relative Humidity: the amount of water vapor in the air relative
to the possible maximum.
RH=q/qsx100
6.
Dew point temperature: temperature at which saturation occurs in
air (generally colder than Tair, equals to Tair when saturated)
mv
md
Saturation vapor pressure
• Saturation vapor pressure is temperature dependent.
• Saturation vapor pressure increases with temperature.
Warmer air can hold more water vapor.
• It’s a non-linear increase. At low temperatures the
saturation vapor pressure increases slowly but it increases
rapidly at higher temperatures.
Video: Water cycle
• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9e1ccP
2P0Fk
Methods to achieve saturation and condensation
•
Diabatic processes – add/remove heat
– Conduction (e.g. movement of air mass over a cold surface)
– Radiation (e.g. cooling of boundary layer air by longwave
radiation)
•
Adiabatic processes - no addition/removal of heat
– Add water vapor to air
– Mix warm air with cold air
– Cooling of air parcel when it rises (because air parcel expands
when it rises, like a balloon)
1st Law of Thermodynamics  expanding air cools,
compressed warms (like a manual hand air pump).
- pDa = cv DT
Forms of Condensation:
• saturation  droplets or ice crystals
• condensation/deposition  dew, frost, fog, clouds
Forms of Condensation:
Dew
• liquid condensation on surface
• occurs early morning on windless cloudless days
• air immediately above ground cools, reaches dew point
• diabatic process
Frost
• ~ similar to dew BUT saturation occurs below 0oC
• deposits white ice crystals  known as hoar frost
• e.g. car windshield
• phase change from vapor directly to solid (deposition)
• diabatic process
Frozen Dew
• results when saturation occurs slightly above 0oC  liquid dew
formed, when Temp drops liquid dew freezes
• forms thin sheet of ice, tightly bound to surface
• dangerous – black ice
Fog
• can be considered a cloud with base at ground level
• air has either been:
• cooled to dew point
• had moisture added
• mixed with warm moist air
• 5 different types
•
•
•
•
•
radiation
advection
upslope
precipitation
steam
Radiation Fog
• occurs when near surface air chills diabatically through loss of
longwave radiation  reaches Dew Pt
• requires cloudless nights and light wind to create mixed layer
•‘burns’ off with sunrise – evaporates from below due to surface
heating
Advection Fog
• occurs when warm moist air moves across a cooler
surface
• air is chilled diabatically to saturation
• common on the U.S. west coast  warm, moist air
from
Pacific advects over the cold California current
• Frequently develop near boundaries of opposing
ocean temperatures
• e.g: northeast coast of the U.S., Gulf Stream
and Labrador current
Upslope Fog
• develops due to adiabatic cooling
• occurs when air is lifted over topographic barriers, mountains
• air expands and cools as it rises
• common in region between Great Plains and Rocky Mountain foothills
Precipitation Fog
• Rain occurs and some evaporates as it falls toward Earth
• Sometimes this will lead to saturation near surface and cause fog
• Adiabatic process
Weather doctor almanac 2002
Steam Fog
• Mixing of warm, moist air with cold air
• Adiabatic process (no net change of energy)
• e.g., common when cold air move over warm lakes/streams in autumn
Steam Fog – can see plumes rising
Weather doctor almanac 2002
Different types of fog found throughout the U.S.
Summary
• Water Vapor Basics (names of different phase changes,
latent heat)
• Humidity indices (there are 6 total). Saturation vapor
pressure increases non-linearly with temperature
• Two methods of achieving saturation and condensation
(diabatic vs. adiabatic processes). Different types of
condensation - dew, frost, fog (radiation, advection,
upslope, precipitation, steam), clouds.