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WEATHER PART 2 Water Vapor enters the atmosphere in 3 ways: 1. 2. 3. Evaporation – the change of phase from liquid to vapor Transpiration – plants releasing water vapor to the air (plant sweat) Evapotranspiration - a combo of evaporation and transpiration Factors that effect the rate at which water vapor enters the air: 1. Air Temperature – as air temp. increases, evapotranspiration increases 2. Surface Area (how spread out something is)– as surface area increases, evapotranpiration increases 3. Air Circulation (wind) – the more air circulates, the more evapotranspiration occurs. 4. Moisture Content of the Air – moist air already had a lot of water in it, so it does not want any more. Water will evaporate more easily off of surfaces when is air is dry. Mrs. Degl 1 Atmospheric Moisture Saturation – when the air is holding all of the water vapor that it can. There is no more room. The air becomes saturated when it is cooled to and reaches it’s Dewpoint Temperature. Relative Humidity – how much water vapor is in the air compared to how much it can hold (which is 100%). If the Relative Humidity is 70%, that means it can still hold 30% more before it reaches it’s Dewpoint Temperature and becomes saturated. Cloud – a collection of tiny liquid water droplets which remain in suspension (floating because they are too light and little). Some very high clouds are made of ice crystals (Cirrus – looks like feathers). Clouds are not made of water vapor. They are either liquid or ice. Each cloud droplet, raindrop, and snowflake form around a tiny piece of dirt, dust, sand, pollen, or salt. This tiny piece of dirt in the center is called the condensation nuclei. Water needs something to cling onto. Do not eat snow or drink rain water. It is dirty. Mrs. Degl 2 How a cloud forms: 1. Air rises, expands, and cools to it’s Dewpoint Temperature. 2. When air reaches it’s Dewpoint Temperature, a few other things automatically happen: a) the air is SATURATED b) the RELATIVE HUMIDITY is 100% c) CONDENSATION OCCURRS Condensation makes a cloud. The water vapor turns to liquid, because heat was released. Clouds are liquid water droplets. Precipitation does not come out of every cloud. The cloud droplets are too light and too tiny to fall. As condensation continues, the droplets begin to grow in size. Once they are heavy and big enough, they fall. That is precipitation. Mrs. Degl 3 Types of Precipitation 1. 2. 3. 4. Rain – this happens when the air temperature reaches it’s dewpoint temperature (condensation), and that is above 0º C. This simply liquid water with a condensation nuclei in the center. Cloud droplets are also liquid water. When the cloud droplets reach a certain size, they start to fall as rain. Snow – this happens when the air temperature reaches it’s dewpoint temperature, and that is below freezing. This is not condensation, it is SUBLIMATION. Sleet – this is when the droplets begin to fall out of clouds as rain in the upper atmosphere, but the air temperature down here is below freezing, and the droplets turn into ice pellets before they reach the ground. Hail – this occurs from large thunderstorms. The droplets begin to fall as rain. These droplets are whisked back up very high into the storm clouds by the severe wind, and they freeze. Then, as they fall again and begin to melt, they are whisked back up into the storm and freeze again. Hail can have many layers. Freezing Rain is when the air temperature is higher than the ground temperature. Liquid rain droplets freeze when they hit the ground. Dew, Fog, and Frost are not forms of precipitation!!!! Mrs. Degl 4 Dry Bulb Temperature = Air Temperature A sling psychrometer measures the wet-bulb and dry bulb temps. Mrs. Degl 5 The Wet-Bulb Depression is the difference between the wet-bulb and dry-bulb temperatures. You do not have to subtract if you are given the Wet-Bulb Depression. The chart looks like and works like the Dewpoint chart. Do not confuse them. Air temp. and Relative Humidity are inverse. Mrs. Degl The R.H. is high in the morning and night, and lowest during mid-day. 6 Air Masses – there are two basic types of air masses High Pressure – Anticyclone Low Pressure - Cyclones 1. 1. 2. 3. 4. Winds blow clockwise away from the center. Divergent air mass In the center, the air is dry, cool, clear, and windy. Higher density air. 2. 3. 4. Winds blow counter-clockwise towards the center. Convergent air mass In the center, air is moist, cloudy, warmer. Lower density air H Mrs. Degl 7 Source Regions – areas on the Earth’s surface where air masses form and acquire their characteristics. The diagram above shows the source regions that create air masses effecting the United States. Mrs. Degl 8 Cold Front – an anti-cyclone overtaking a cyclone. The cold air in the anti-cyclone moves in and pushes the warm cyclone out of the way. Cold fronts have cooler, clear weather behind them. Cold fronts travel the fastest. Warm Front – a cyclone overtaking an anti-cyclone. The warm air in the cyclone moves in and pushes the cooler air out of the way. Warm fronts have warmer, cloudy, moister air behind them. Occluded Fronts Results by warmer air being pushed above the surface of Earth by cooler air closing in from both sides. Associated with large areas of rainy, unsettled weather. Stationary Front Boundaries between air masses that are not moving. Winds are blowing in opposite directions along a boundary between warm and cold air masses. Mrs. Degl 9 It always precipitates on the cold front. High-Pressure Systems are behind a cold front. Cold fronts have brief, heavy storms on them. It always precipitates ahead of the warm front. Low-Pressure systems are behind a warm front. Steady precipitation is ahead of these. Mrs. Degl 10 Forecasting and reading weather maps: Synoptic Weather Map As a class, we are going to write some weather forecasts below: Mrs. Degl 11 Thunderstorm Thunderstorms can occur anywhere in the world and at any time of the day. All thunderstorms produce lightning and thunder. Some have the potential to produce damaging straight-line winds, large hail, heavy rain, flooding, and tornadoes. A thunderstorm is classified as severe when it contains one or more of the following phenomena: •Hail 3/4" or greater •Winds gusting in excess of 50 knots (57.5 mph) •A Tornado Mrs. Degl 12 Lightning A moving thunderstorm gathers a pool of positively charged particles along the ground that travel with the storm. As the differences in charges continue to increase, positively charged particles rise up taller objects such as trees, houses, and telephone poles. The negatively charged area in the storm will send out a charge toward the ground called a stepped leader. It is invisible to the human eye, and moves in steps in less than a second toward the ground. When it gets close to the ground, it is attracted by all these positively charged objects, and a channel develops. You see the electrical transfer in this channel as lightning. There may be several return strokes of electricity within the established channel that you will see as flickering lightning. Thunder The lightning channel heats rapidly to 30,000 °C. The rapid expansion of heated air causes the thunder. Since light travels faster than sound in the atmosphere, the sound will be heard after the lightning. If you see lightning and hear thunder at the same time, that lightning is in your neighborhood! Mrs. Degl 13 Tornado Warm, humid conditions are very favorable for thunderstorm development as strong updrafts feed warm, moist air into thunderstorms. If the air is very unstable, severe thunderstorms with damaging winds, large hail, and sometimes tornadoes erupt. A tornado is a violently rotating column of air which is in contact with both a cumulonimbus (or, in rare cases, a cumulus) cloud base and the surface of the earth. Tornadoes come in many sizes, but are typically in the form of a visible condensation funnel, whose narrow end touches the earth and is often encircled by a cloud of debris. They are measured on the Fujita scale (1-5), which is now changed to the EF scale because of a few modifications. Mrs. Degl 14 Category Description Level Of Damage F-0 Gale Tornado 40 - 72 MPH Chimneys damaged; branches broken off trees; shallow-rooted trees uprooted; sign boards damaged. F-1 Moderate Tornado 73 - 112 MPH Roof surfaces peeled off; mobile homes pushed off foundations or overturned; moving autos pushed off roads. F-2 Significant Tornado 113 - 157 MPH Roofs torn off frame houses; mobile homes demolished; box cars pushed over; large trees snapped or uprooted; light-object projectiles generated. F-3 Severe Tornado 158 - 206 MPH Roofs and some walls torn off well-constructed houses; trains overturned; most trees in forest uprooted; heavy cars lifted off the ground and thrown. F-4 Devastating Tornado 207 - 260 MPH Well-constructed houses leveled; structures with weak foundations relocated; cars thrown and large projectiles generated. F-5 Incredible Tornado 261 - 318 MPH Strong frame houses lifted off foundations and carried considerable distance to disintegrate; automobile-sized projectiles hurtle through the air in excess of 100 yards Mrs. Degl 15 Mrs. Degl 16 Hurricane Hurricanes start out as Tropical Depressions (mT, Low-Pressure) in the Atlantic Ocean surrounding the Equator, off the coast of Africa. Hurricane season begins at the end of summer and runs into late October. They form because the abundance of summer heat evaporates large amounts of ocean water putting it into the atmosphere. Once storm winds reach 75 miles/hour, it is classified as a hurricane. Hurricanes loose their energy after they hit land, because the evaporation of ocean water is their fuel. Hurricanes are measured by The Saffir Simpson Scale of 1-5. Mrs. Degl 17 1 Wind Speed: 74 95 MPH Storm Surge: 4 - 5 Feet Above Normal Primary damaged to unanchored mobile homes, shrubbery, and trees. Some coastal road flooding and minor pier damage. Little damage to building structures. 2 Wind Speed: 96 110 MPH Storm Surge: 6 - 8 Feet Above Normal Considerable damage to mobile homes, piers, and vegetation. Coastal and low-lying escape routes flood 2 - 4 hours before arrival of hurricane center. Buildings sustain roofing material, door, and window damage. Small craft in unprotected moorings break moorings. 3 Wind Speed: 111 130 MPH Storm Surge: 9 12 Feet Above Normal Mobile homes destroyed. Some structural damage to small homes and utility buildings. Flooding near coast destroys smaller structures; larger structures damaged by floating debris. Terrain continuously lower than 5 feet. ASL may be flooded up to 6 miles inland. 4 Wind Speed: 131 155 MPH Storm Surge: 13 18 Feet Above Normal Extensive curtain wall failures with some complete roof structure faiture on small residences. Major erosion of beaches. Major damage to lower floors of structures near the shore. Terrain continuously lower than 10 feet. ASL may flood (and require mass evacuations) up to 6 miles inland. 5 Wind Speed: Over 155 MPH Storm Surge: Over 18 Feet Above Normal Complete road failure on many homes and industrial buildings. Some complete building failures. Major damage to lower floors of all structures located less than 15 feet ASL and within 500 yards of the shoreline. Massive evacuation of low ground Mrs. Degl 18 residential areas may be required.