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Chapter 8 Atmospheric Circulation and Pressure Distributions • General Atmospheric Circulation – Well defined global pressure zones – Creates predominant wind motions – The largest wind systems define the general circulation of the planet • Three-Cell Model – _____________ – tropical cell driven by heat • – Farrell Cell • Located in the middle-latitudes between 300 and 600 latitude – Polar Cell – polar cell driven by temperature differences • Located between 600 latitude and poles – _______________ – an established low pressure zone near the equator • intertropical convergence zone (ITCZ) • • Sometimes called “doldrums” • Migrates with changing seasons 0 – Subtropical Highs – established high pressure zones around 30 latitude • • Establishes the Northeast and southeast trade winds - Subpolar Lows – established low pressure zones at high latitudes • Abundant clouds and precipitation • • Migrates with changing seasons • Establishes the north and south westerlies - ____________ – established high pressure zones at the poles • Sinking air and lack of precipitation • Establishes the north and south easterlies – The three-celled model vs. reality: the bottom line • Hadley cells are close approximations of real world • Ferrel and polar cells do not approximate the real world • Model is unrepresentative of flow aloft • Continents and topographic features cause flaws in the model • Semi-Permanent Pressure Cells – Northern hemisphere cells • Winter – Aleutian Low, Icelandic Low, and Siberian High dominate • Summer – Hawaiian High, Bermuda High, and Tibetan Low dominate • The Upper Troposphere 1 – – – – Westerly winds in the upper atmosphere • Air motions directed towards poles • Redirected by Coriolis deflection – Westerly winds aloft result – Jet streams - • Polar jet is located along the polar front • Subtropical jet is located near the equator within the Hadley cell • Stronger winds exist during winter – Troughs • – Ridges • A bump in the upper air heights – Rossby waves (_______________) • Wavelengths and amplitudes vary • Transfers energy from equator and the poles • Ocean Currents – Deflected by coriolis effect creating clockwise and counter clockwise motions – Gulf Stream • Major Wind Systems – _________________ – seasonal variations created by wind and pressure reversals • – Land has cold high pressure, while water is warmer and lower pressure – • – Land is warmer low pressure, while water is cooler high pressure – Air flows from water to land (onshore) • Orographic enhancement – Foehn, Chinook and Santa Ana (Fall) winds • Orographic induced • Responsible for greatest 1-minute temp. change • Foehn and Chinook occur in winter, while Santa Ana’s typically in fall • Compression warming on lee side – – Katabatic winds • Cold, dense air flowing down mountain slopes • Common in Antarctica and Greenland – Sea breeze – • During day land becomes hot and lower pressure than water • • Breeze migrates inland as day progresses 2 – Land breeze • During night land becomes cooler and higher pressure than water • Wind blows from land to water – Valley and mountain breeze • Differential heating of valley and higher elevations • Diurnal wind shift • Valley breeze blows up from the valley • Mountain breeze blows down the mountain • Air-Sea Interactions – Walker circulation • A westward flow of surface air over the equatorial Pacific – ___________ - Unusually warm water in the eastern equatorial Pacific Ocean • Linked to global weather anomalies • • Southern Oscillation – pressure differences between western and eastern Pacific – SOI Index determines magnitude difference – • Distinct global teleconnection patterns result – • Strengthened “normal” conditions • End of Chapter 8 3