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NREM 407/507 January 29, 2009 Day 6 • Work on Weather Lab Together • Power Points Are Due Next Friday, Feb 6 @ Midnight (e-mailed) • Lab next Tuesday OUTDOORS – all period watch e-mail for any changes Furtwangler Glacier – Mt. Kilimanjaro Mt Kilimajaro Tanzania 19,340 ft above sea level Tallest free standing mountain – rises 15,000ft 1990 Mt Kilimanjaro Climate Change Impacts on Glaciers Sources of Stream flow 2000 Boulder Glacier , Mount Baker Cascades Mtns, Washington Stream flow generated by Glacier Retreated 1,500 ft in 8 years Terminus of Glacier A 5 mi2 watershed receives 2 in of rainfall. 10% of that produces channel storm flow that discharges in 10 hours. What is the average cfs of the storm flow? 1 mi2 = 640 ac; 1 ac = 43,560 ft2 5 mi2 x 640 ac = 3,200 ac 2”/12” = 1/6 ft = 0.167 ft x 3,200 ac = 533 ac-ft x 43,560 ft2 = 23,232,000 ft3 x 10% = 2,323,200 ft3 of storm flow in 10 hours 2,323,200 ft3/(60 sec/min x 60 min/hr x 10 hr = 36,000 sec) = 64.5 cfs Weather &Topography Give Rise to Climate, Biomes, Rivers, Runoff Coastal Conifer Forest Intermountain Mid Grass Region Prairie Intermoutain Grassland Tall Grass Prairie Great Basin Central Valley Short Grass Prairie Eastern Deciduous Forest Southern Conifers Precipitation Streamflow Water Is Awesome All three states at normal earth temperatures Solid Water Hail Liquid Water Water Vapor Water Droplets How Do Clouds Form? Convectional lifting • Warm moist air rises & cools • Cooler air holds less vapor • Air becomes saturated • Condensation occurs around condensation nuclei Frontal lifting Orographic lifting Condensation level Kinds of Precipitation • Rain – liquid drops starting as liquid or snow falling through warm air • Freezing rain – snow melts, hits cold air, freezes when it hits a cold surface • Sleet – snow melts in warm air, refreezes falling through colder air. • Snow - falling through cold air never melting Clouds In Contact With the Ground Radiation Fog Warm moist air cooled from below by contact with a cooling earth surface – cooling by longwave radiation, local, shallow, disappears right after sunrise. Advection Fog Forms when a warm air mass flows over a cold surface and cools to saturation from below, wide-spread & can last through morning or day. Ice Fog Ice forms without condensation nuclei in supercooled air – air temp has to be at least -15 F – widespread. Hoar Frost Ice crystals form on small frozen surfaces like branches or barbed wire. Radiation Fog Advection Fog Energy Exchange with Changes of State Sensible vs Latent Heat Heating 1 gram of water 0 – 100 C = 100 cal Evaporating 1 gram requires 540 cal of energy Condensing 1 gram of vapor releases 540 cal Freezing 1 gram releases 80 cal, thawing requires 80 cal Group Exercise Why are large bodies of water cooler in summer & warmer in winter? Role of Water and Heat Transfer Air Circulation – Convection Cell Advection - wind Subsidence Convection Advection - wind Large lake cool Land - warm Sunny Calm Morning – Summer Conditions On-shore breezes Air Circulation – Convection Cell Subsidence Advection - wind Convection Advection - wind Large lake warm Land - cool Clear Calm Night – Sky Wide Open – Surface Cools Off-shore breezes 20,000 ft - 42.5 F 10,000 ft -12.5 F Cloud 5,000 ft - 80 F Group Activity What happens if 30 F air is lifted to 10,000 ft & 20,000 ft? -25 F Dry adiabatic lapse rate = 5.5o/1,000 ft Cools @ 3.0F/1,000ft Moist adiabatic lapse rate = 3.0o/1,000 ft 2.5 F Condensation level Cools @ 5.5F/1,000 ft Air expands less dense 30 F Sea level Moist Air rises & condensation begins at 5,000 ft Cools @ 5.5F/1,000 ft 30 F Dry Air No condensation all the way up Convectional lifting Group Activity What are the temperatures at 4,000 ft - Condensation Level, 15,000 ft and sea level on the other side? Frontal lifting 5F 15,000 ft Rain – lost moisture Orographic lifting Drops @ dry adiabatic lapse rate 38 F Condensation Level – 4,000 ft 60 F 87.5 F Climate & Weather What Kinds of Energy are Important to Watersheds: 1. 2. 3. 4. Radiant Thermal or heat (sensible & latent) Mechanical (kinetic & potential) Chemical Movement of radiant/heat energy: 1. Radiation 2. Conduction 3. Convection 4. Latent Heat Radiation – The Energy Source R = Constant * T4 Higher temperatures shorter wavelengths energy (ultraviolet vs infrared) When radiation hits a surface it can be: a + r + t = 1 (absorbed, reflected, transmitted) In the atmosphere it can also be scattered s + a + r + t = 1 (scattered – gives blue sky) Radiation from atmosphere Solar Radiation – Shortwave (high energy) Earth (Terrestrial) Radiation – Longwave (low energy) more Group Exercise Albedo – reflection – reduces heat load on the surface Which one of each set below reflects more radiation: Fresh snow vs old snow Dark soil vs light colored soil Wet soil vs dry soil Forest vs Grassland Hardwood (deciduous forest) vs conifer forest Lake surface when the sun is near the horizon vs nearly overhead More Slope & Radiation Perpendicular radiation – most energy per unit surface area Higher Potential Evapotranspiration Group Activity Cooler – Moister Supports more plants S/W facing N/E facing What are the aspects in this valley and why? Describe valley wind movement during the day & night and why? Earth’s Tilt in relation to Sun Important in Seasonal Heating Ames Ames Ames Ames Angle of Direct Shortwave Radiation at Solar Noon – Importance of Aspect Result Differential Heating of The Earth’s Surface 90 – (23.5+23.5) = 43 90 – 23.5 = 66.5 23.5 23.5 23.5 47 66.5 Impacts Lifting & Subsiding Air & Associated Moisture 90 – (66.5-23.5) = 47 90 – (90-23.5) = 23.5 Winter Solstice – December 21 Calculate the angles in the Northern Hemisphere at the Solar Equinoxes Arctic 66.5 Ames - 42 Cancer – 23.5 90 – 90 = 0 90 – 66.5 = 23.5 90 – 42 = 48 90 – 23.5 = 66.5 Equator 23.5 90 Capricorn – 23.5 Antarctic 66.5 Solar Interception at the Equinoxes (March 21, Sept 21) Group Activity What south-facing slope in Ames gets perpendicular radiation at the equinoxes (48o)? South-facing Solar altitude North-facing 90 42 48 180 What north-facing slope gets no direct shortwave radiation? Atmospheric Circulation – Big Convection Cell Ames 42 N Cools as it moves North – Drops Very Dry Warmest at Equator - Lifting Where is the Major Global Precipitation? Frontal 30 N Convectional Equator 30 S Frontal Where are the World’s Major Deserts? 30 N Great Basin Mojave Sonoran Iranian/Thar Saharan Arabian Gobi Equator Atacama 30 S Namibian Patagonian Australian Kalahari Subsiding – Warm/Dry Air (Subsidence) Major Air Mass Source Regions for North America Cold/dry cP/cA Cool/Moist mP Warm/Moist mT c – Continental (dry) m – Maritime (wet) P = Polar (cold); A = Arctic T = Tropical (Warm) Equator Paths of Movement of Major North American Air Masses cP/cA mP mT Equator Air Masses Consist of Dense Subsiding (dropping) Air H L Air circulation Clockwise & out Air circulation Counterclockwise & in Air circulation Clockwise & out When 2 Air Masses Meet They Create A Trough of Low Pressure Between Them (less dense rising air) Location of Fronts & Low Pressure Cells H Surface 600 mph Air Still 800 mph 800 mph (air/surface) 1,000 mph (air/surface) Earth is not a perfect sphere Velocity of surface at the equator ~ 1,000 mph to the east. At Ames ~ 750 mph to the east. Result is deflection to the right of air moving in N hemisphere Coriolis Force Circulation Around H and L Pressure Cells Diverge from the center subsiding air Converge at the center and lift Pressure Gradient Coriolis Force Actual Wind H = subsiding or sinking air L = convectional lifting Cold Center – Dense Air - Sinks Warm Center – Lighter Air - Rises Pressure Gradient from H to L from inside to outside Pressure Gradient from H to L from outside to inside Flow turns to right & clockwise Flow turns right & counterclockwise H = subsiding or sinking air L = convectional lifting What are the wind directions at the following locations: X CALM X X X X CALM X X Chicago Las Vegas New Orleans Detroit New York Seattle Shreveport, LA What is Going On Where the Air Masses Meet – Fronts? cP/cA Occluded Front Warm Front Stationary Front mP Cold Front mT Oriented NE to SW Cold Front NE Slope of Frontal Surface = 1:50 to 1:150 (1 mile vertical for each mile horizontal) Move at 10-40 mph SW Wind shift with passage SW to NW Wind Speed in Cold Air Clouds – cumulus (vertical) Rain – short, intense right at front Warm Air Warm Front Oriented NW to SE Slope of Frontal Surface = 1:100 to 1:300 Move at 5-20 mph NW Wind shift with passage ENE to SW SE Clouds – stratus Rain – long, gentle ahead of front Cumulus – vertical General Types of Clouds Stratus - layer Alto – mid level Cirro – high level 5-20 mph 10-40 mph Occluded Front Development of Occluded Front Faster moving cold front catches up to warm front lifting warm air off the ground Once warm air loses contact with ground it loses source of moisture & dies Occluded Front Please Take Out Your Lab Turn to Page 9 – Synoptic Weather Map Exercise Synoptic Weather Map 6 pm Yesterday Radar – 1-28 5 pm World 1-28-09 6pm L H H H H L L H Synoptic Weather Map 6 pm Yesterday H H Pressure In Millibars Station Report – Page 15 Synoptic Map The center of air masses are H pressure cells. Where 2 air masses meet a frontal surface develops. Air from a cold air mass moving into a warm air mass creates a cold front. Air from a warm air mass moving up and over a cold air mass creates a warm front. When neither air mass is moving a stationary front is created. Low pressure disturbances form along fronts. Synoptic Weather Map Isobars – lines of equal pressure – Plotted at 4 mb intervals. 1,000 mb = 1 bar ~ 15 lbs/in2 1,013 –1,040 ~ High pressure 980 – 1,012 ~ Low pressure Station Model Data – major NOAA NWS recording stations are plotted on map. Model provides extensive data – page 15 Weather Map Exercise Pages 15-21 Weather Map P 21 P 21 P 19 Pages19 & 21 Weather Map Exc. Can Use This Map To Predict What Is Going To Happen Synoptic Map The center of air masses are H pressure cells. Where 2 air masses meet a frontal surface develops. Air from a cold air mass moving into a warm air mass creates a cold front. Air from a warm air mass moving up and over a cold air mass creates a warm front. When neither air mass is moving a stationary front is created. Low pressure disturbances form along fronts. 24 Hours Later Warm Sector Figure 1 – Wave Cyclone With Station Data – Last Page of Exercise Page 10 – a (1) Draw Isobars – Plotting those evenly divisible by 4 mb – Begin with 1004 around L on Wave Cyclone a (2) Label L’s & H’s a (3) Label fronts Draw Isobars – Plotting those evenly divisible by 4 mb – Begin with 1004 around L on Wave Cyclone 1020 H 1024 H 1028 1024 1020 1008 1016 1012 Questions a 1-3 L 1004 H cP H H L H 1008 L 1004 mT Questions a 4 & 5 H Calm & Dew Point = Actual Temp H Fractostratus Of Bad Weather 1008 H L 1004 Wind off warmer water Cumulonimbus with anvil shaped top Questions b 1-4 H cP Falling Steady then falling H Steady H L Rising 1008 L 1004 mT Question b 5 H H ~170o H L H ~60o L 1004 500/24 = 21 mph Question c 1-2 400/24 = 17 mph H 275/12 = 23 mph 125/12 = 10.5 mph Counterclockwise Backing Veering Clockwise Veering Clockwise 12 hrs Questions c 3-6 New Orelans 7 pm H H L Warm Sector 275/20 mph for L= 13.75 hrs 8:45 pm Questions c 8-12 100/10 mph for warm front H= 10 hrs = 5 pm Feb 15