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Download Weather Vocabulary
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Weather Standards Vocab Climate Winter Storm Smog Weather Weather Map Acid Rain Air Pressure Temperature Natural Events (causing pollution) Evaporation Relative Humidity Transpiration Cirrus Clouds Be sure to add these to your list of terms: Runoff Stratus Clouds Global Wind: Meteorologist Cumulus Clouds High Pressure System: Meteorology Cold Front Air Mass Warm Front Low Pressure System: Mesosphere Storm Convection Tornado Pressure-Gradient Force Thunderstorm Hurricane Flood Ozone Layer Stratosphere Jet Stream Thermosphere Coriolis Effect Gulf Stream Total: 38 terms Some help… Air Mass: a huge body of air that has similar temperature, humidity, and air pressure at any given height. Cold Front: forms when cold air moves under warm air which is less dense and pushes air up (produces thunderstorms heavy rain or snow). Convection Current: The circular movement of substances due to changes in density. Warm air rises and cool air sinks. Global Wind: heated air rises near the equator and moves toward Earth's poles, while cooler air at the poles falls and moves toward the equator; move in a particular direction across Earth over long distances; often steer weather in different directions. High Pressure System: Formed when an air mass cools over an ocean or a cold region on land. This dense system moves outward toward low pressure systems, creating a wind. Causes, clear blue skies, is dry etc. Low Pressure System: area with lower atmospheric pressure than its surrounding areas; this makes air from surrounding areas to flow into the low, the end result of which is probably cloudiness and precipitation. Mesosphere: The middle layer of Earth's atmosphere; the layer in which most meteoroids burn up. Ozone Layer: a layer in the stratosphere (at approximately 20 miles) that contains a concentration of ozone sufficient to block most ultraviolet radiation from the sun. Stratosphere: the layer of the atmosphere that lies between the troposphere and the mesosphere and in which temperature increases as altitude increases; contains the ozone layer. Thermosphere: The outermost layer of Earth's atmosphere. Where the shuttle orbits Earth. Climate: the average temperature, precipitation, humidity, air pressure, and wind, over time in a particular place. Weather: the physical condition of the atmosphere at a specific place at a specific time. Meteorology: is the study of the entire atmosphere, including the weather