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PART 1 Air Masses Fronts Winds What is Weather? Weather is the state of the atmosphere: hot or cold, wet or dry, calm or stormy, clear or cloudy. • Weather is driven by air pressure differences between one place and another (in turn, air pressure is defined by temperature and moisture). • Most weather phenomena occur in the troposphere: On Earth, the common weather phenomena include wind, clouds, rain, snow, fog and dust storms. Less common events include natural disasters such as tornadoes, hurricanes, typhoons and ice storms. • Weather is one of the fundamental processes that shape the Earth through weathering and erosion. Heating of the Atmosphere The Sun shines more directly near the equator bringing these areas more warmth; the polar regions are at such an angle to the Sun that they get little or no sunlight during the winter, causing colder temperatures. Unequal heating of the atmosphere creates a restless movement of air (and water!) to distribute heat energy from the Sun across the planet. Air Masses and Fronts Air mass is defined as a large body of air that has similar temperature and moisture. A boundary that separates two different air masses is called a weather (atmospheric) front. Air Masses Cover many thousands of square kilometers. • Originate in source regions: flat, uniform composition areas with light winds. • Examples: snow covered Arctic plains, tropicsubtropic oceans, forests, mountains, large bodies of water. • Classified by their origin: Land (continental) Water (maritime) Tropical (within 25° of equator) Polar (poleward of 60° north and south) Air masses affecting the U.S. weather during the course of a typical year. Weather Fronts Cold front: Warm front: fast moving cold (dense) air mass runs into a slow moving warm air mass and slides under. fast moving warm (less dense) air mass collides with a slow moving cold air mass and moves over. Weather: showers and thunderstorms. Weather: fog, rain, snow. Weather Fronts Stationary front: Occluded front: cold air mass and warm air mass meet, but neither has enough force to move the other. warm air mass is caught between two cooler air masses and the denser cold air masses move underneath and push it upward. Weather: rain, thunder. What types of weather fronts can you find on this map? Air Pressure Differences H L • Air pressure differences can occur due to: the Sun angle at any particular spot surface temperature differences (higher altitudes are cooler than lower altitudes) • As air warms, it expands and becomes less dense creating lower air pressure (L). • Cool air sinks and becomes denser creating higher air pressure (H). Differences in air pressure cause wind: flow of air on a large scale. Wind • Winds blow (that is air moves) from areas of high pressure to areas of low pressure. • Wind speed is often a way of classifying storms. Meteorologists distinguish two types of winds: Local Winds and Global Winds. How to Measure? • Air pressure is measured using a barometer (from Greek baros ‘weight’). Winds are characterized by their direction and speed. • Wind speed is measured by • Winds are named by the direction from which they come. anemometer (from Greek anemos ‘wind’). Wind Rose • A wind rose shows how wind speed and direction are typically distributed at a particular location over a specified period of time (year, season, month): typically uses 16 cardinal directions can quickly indicate the dominant wind directions and the direction of strongest wind speeds. • Compiling a wind rose is one of the preliminary steps taken in constructing airport runways, as aircraft typically perform their best take-offs and landings pointing into the wind. Local Winds These are the winds we feel on the ground: • cover short distances • blow from any direction • created and influenced by local conditions, local temperature variations, and local topography. Sea Breeze Mountain Breeze Land Breeze Valley Breeze Local winds are often seasonal. Local Winds Sea and land breezes are formed by varying temperature differences between the land and water. • During the day the land heats up faster than the water: the air above the land warms up and rises, forming a low pressure area; the wind will blow from the sea to the land, called a sea breeze. • At night, land cools off faster than the sea: the air above the sea surface warms up and rises; and wind will blow from the land to the sea, called a land breeze. H L H L Local Winds Mountain and valley breezes are examples of local winds caused by the topography of an area. • During the day the mountain slopes heat up: the warm less dense air flows up the mountain; this is called a valley breeze. • At night, the mountain will cool off faster than the valley: the cool mountain air descends; this is called a mountain breeze. Local Winds of North America Chinook: A warm, westerly wind found in western North America – Canada and the USA, when air from the Pacific blows over the Rocky Mountains and other upland areas. Norther usually occurs in winter but occasionally occurs at other times of year during periods of big change in temperature. Nor'easter blizzards is a macro-scale storm along the East Coast of the United States and Atlantic Canada that forms repeatedly during winter months. Norte is a strong cold northeasterly wind which blows in Mexico along the shores of the Gulf of Mexico. It results from an outbreak of cold air from the north. Find more local winds by continent at www.thecompetitionworld.com Our Local Winds