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Chapter 23B Air Pressure and Wind A. Atmospheric Pressure - Air gets thinner as you go up in the atmosphere. - 50% of the air is in the lowest 5km (15,000 ft) of the atmosphere - 90% of the air is in the troposphere, other 10% is in 3 layers above - Air pressure is a measure of the weight of the atmosphere. - One measure of this weight is about 1kg/cm2 or 14.7 lbs/in2. - This means that a column of air one centimeter on a side pounds would weigh a kilogram (2.2lbs) - Or a column 1 inch on a side weighs 14.7 - The way we sense air pressure is by our ears “popping” as we go up and down 1. Mercury Barometers - A mercury barometer measures how far up a column of mercury will be pushed up to balance the weight of air. - Mercury barometers are accurate, expensive, hazardous, and difficult to read - Average air pressure will push up the mercury 76 cm or 29.92 inches - Metric measure of air pressure is millibar (mb) – average sea level pressure is 1013.2mb - A water barometer would push water up 32 feet - High pressure (heavier air) will push the mercury up above 30 inches - Lower pressure (lighter air) pushes the mercury up only about 29.8 inches 2. Aneroid Barometers - Aneroid means “without liquid” so they do not contain mercury - The most important part is a metal container with a partial vacuum inside - This container changes shape as the air pressure pushing on it changes Normal pressure High pressure Low pressure - A series of springs, chains, and pulleys transfer the shape change to movement of a needle on a dial. - These barometers are cheap, safe, but less accurate 3. Altimeters - Because as you go up the pressure drops a barometer can be used to tell altitude - These special barometers are called altimeters - Since all barometers will act like altimeters, a new barometer must be corrected to sea level before it can be used. 23.3 Winds A. Why Does the Wind Blow? - All winds are caused by pressure differences. - Winds blow from areas of high pressure to areas of low pressure. - Pressure differences are caused by temperature and humidity differences 1. Temperature differences - Convection currents explain how temperature differences create pressure differences. - Warm rising air creates low pressure - Cold sinking air creates high pressure 2. Humidity differences - Humid air is lighter so it creates low pressure - This is because water vapor molecules weigh less than nitrogen or oxygen molecule - Dry air is heavier so it creates high pressure 3. Summary: - LOW PRESSURE – WARM HUMID AIR - HIGH PRESSURE – COLD DRY AIR - ALL WINDS BLOW FROM HIGH TO LOW. B. Global Winds - The cold dry air at the poles creates a permanent high pressure area - The warm humid air at the equator creates a permanent low pressure area - Based on what we know, all winds in the Northern Hemisphere should blow from pole to equator creating a north wind. - Unfortunately the atmosphere is too big and there is the Coriolis Effect which creates 3 wind belts. - The Coriolis Effect is due to the Earth’s rotation and bends all winds to the right in the Northern Hemisphere (to the left in the Southern Hemisphere) - There are 3 major wind belts (horizontal movement of air): trade winds, westerlies, and polar easterlies. - Between the 3 wind belts are 3 pressure belts (vertical movement of air) 1. Doldrums – Hot humid air in the tropics near the equator 2. Horse Latitudes – Hot dry air at 30°N or S creating deserts 3. Polar Front – Stormy area at 60°N or S: cold polar and warm tropical air meet - Wind and pressure belts move 23 1/2° north in the summer and 23 1/2° south in winter - All the winds in the upper atmosphere are westerlies. - The jet streams are bands of very strong westerlies (500 km/hr, 300mph) at the top of the troposphere. - They are important for jet travel and they determine the track of storms. C. Local Winds - All winds are named by the direction from which they blow. - A north wind blows from the north and a southwest wind blows from the southwest. - Monsoons are seasonal winds which blow on and off the continents. - Land and sea breezes are day to night winds caused by uneven heating of land and water during the day. - Mountain and valley breezes are similar to land/sea breezes but the uneven heating is due to the fact that thin mountain air heats fast and cools fast - Wind speed is measured with an anemometer that spins. - Wind direction is measured with a wind vane that points into the wind - A wind sock measures both wind speed and direction - Wind speed on a weather map is shown with an arrow for direction then bars and flags for wind speed. - Start with a station circle and draw an arrow showing the direction the wind is coming from, then add a short bar for 5 mph, long bars for 10 mph, and a flag for 50 mph