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Foundations of Climate Science Lectures 1–3 Rodrigo Caballero Newton’s Laws • First Law (Law of Inertia): A body at rest tends to stay at rest while a body in motion tends to stay in motion, traveling at a constant speed and in a straight line, until acted upon by an outside force Newton’s Laws • Second Law (Law of Momentum): A force exerted on an object (including a parcel of water or gas) of a given mass causes the object to accelerate in the direction of the applied force and in proportion to the force divided by the objects mass. • Force equals Mass times Acceleration F = ma Important forces in the atmosphere (and ocean!) • • • • Gravity Pressure gradient Coriolis Friction Pressure gradient • Pressure: force per unit area • In fluid, same force/unit are exerted in every direction • A body (e.g. a fluid parcel) immersed in a pressure gradient will experience a net force • Mathematically: • NOTE: is the corresponding acceleration (force per unit mass) Fig. 6-4, p. 161 Apparent Forces in the Atmosphere • Coriolis Force • Centrifugal Force/Centripetal acceleration Coriolis Force Mathematically: Coriolis force is always to the right in the Northern Hemisphere Fig. 6-9, p. 165 Force balances in the atmosphere (and ocean) • Vertical: hydrostatic balance • Horizontal: geostrophic balance Geostrophic Balance • • • A balance is reached between the coriolis force and the pressure gradient force If there is no friction then this occurs when the parcel of air is parallel to the isobars. At this point there is no net force on the air parcel - no acceleration it now moves with constant velocity. Surface winds • Friction affects winds only close to the earth's surface. • Now we must balance three forces - Coriolis, pressure gradient and friction. • Net effect is to induce a net inflow around a cyclone, an effect known as convergence • Around an anticyclone we get a net outflow, divergence Fig. 6-18, p. 175 Fig. 6-24, p. 181 Scales of motion Whether balances apply or not depends on scale (size) of the system: Scale (km) Hydrostatic Geostrophic Micro (< 1) No No Meso (1-100) Pretty much No Synoptic (100-1000) Yes Yes Planetary (>1000) Yes Yes