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Evaporation, Condensation, Clouds and Precipitation Water • exists as a solid, liquid, and gas • can change from one state to another • The change from a solid to a liquid is called melting, liquid to a solid is called freezing • Heat of Fusion = +/- 334 J/g/°C GAS LIQUID SOLID Evaporation • the process of water changing from a liquid to a gas • occurs when water absorbs energy from its surroundings • Because of this, evaporation results in the surroundings becoming cooler (think of sweating) • Heat of Vaporization = 2260 J/g EVAPORATION IS A COOLING PROCESS Condensation • the process of water changing from a gas to a liquid • occurs when water vapor loses energy • Because of this, condensation results in the surroundings getting warmer • Heat of Vaporization = -2260 J/g • COOL TEMPS - CONDENSATIO • WARM TEMPERATURE EVAPORATION CONDENSATION IS A WARMING PROCESS Clouds • formed by the condensation of water vapor • There are three main types of clouds: cumulus, stratus, and cirrus – Cumulus clouds are thick, puffy clouds. They tend to be lower in the sky – Stratus clouds appear as low to middle sheets or layers of clouds – Cirrus clouds appear as high, thin or “feathery” clouds. These clouds are made of ice crystals • There are many forms of these types of clouds – Ex. Cumulonimbus clouds often produce strong thunderstorms and can form tornadoes!! – Nimbus – rain/storm in Latin CLOUDS have FLAT BOTTOMS which indicate the level of the atmosphere where the dew point temperature has been reached! • Cumulus clouds are "fair weather" clouds and are unlikely to produce precipitation • They form in warm air on sunny days • Cumulus clouds can form at almost any altitude, with bases sometimes as high as 14,000 feet • Cumulus clouds are clouds of vertical development and may grow upwards dramatically under certain circumstances • The updrafts may be caused by heating of the air by the ground surface, the action of a cold front, or to temperature differences between land and ocean • The vertical air currents results in towering clouds with an anvil head on top called cumulonimbus clouds • Stratus clouds are low clouds, ranging in height from near the earth's surface up to 6,500 feet • Stratus clouds form flat layers or uniform sheets • Only a fine drizzle can form from stratus clouds because there is no vertical development • Cirrus clouds are wispy in appearance, and resemble horsetails (they are sometimes called mares' tails) • They are among the highest clouds, forming at elevations of 25,000 feet and above, where the temperatures are far below freezing • Cirrus clouds are formed almost entirely of tiny ice crystals Precipitation • any form of water that falls from the clouds when they become too large be supported by the air • Forms of precipitation include: – Rain – Snow – Sleet – rain that falls through air that is below freezing – Freezing rain – rain that freezes on contact with a surface that is below freezing – Hail – formed in cumulonimbus clouds (thunderstorms). These are ice balls which can be as large as a softball!! HAIL USUALLY HAPPENS IN THE SUMMERTIME!! • **When water condenses on nitrate and sulfate particles (from burning fossil fuels), acid rain is formed Snow Level Ice Level Supercooled Rain Level Rain Level BRRRR…I’ m CHILL Y! • Precipitation does not occur the same everywhere (OROGRAPHIC LIFT) – Wind hits the windward side of the mountain, rises, cools off, and condensation happens – This forms clouds and precipitation – As the air goes over the top, is sinks on the leeward side – As the air sinks, it compresses together and gets warmed by friction – Since the warmer air can hold more moisture, condensation does not occur (and no precipitation)! • Occurs along the Sierra Nevada Mts. The California side is wet, the Nevada side is dry