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LESSON 3 THERMODINAMICS OF THE ATMOSPHERE • • • • • • • Equation of state for an ideal gas. Gasses mixture Work and heat. The first law. Changes of phase Air parcel. Adiabatic processes. Water steam: Moist air. Saturation Moist air processes. Diagrams Vertical stability E n v i r o n m e n t a l Equipo docente: Alfonso Calera Belmonte Antonio J. Barbero P h y s i c s Departamento de Física Aplicada UCLM Hurricane Wilma (10/19/2005) Photo from http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/multimedia/hurricane_wilma.html 1 STATE EQUATION FOR AN IDEAL GAS pV nRT p n m RT m R RT T V M V V M r R M R 8.314 kJ kmol 1 K 1 m V v KJ kg The first law states the conservation of energy 1 V m K 1 E n v i r o n m e n t a l pv rT w 0 FIRST LAW du q w q 0 http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/thermo/firlaw.html q 0 System w 0 2 P h y s i c s SYSTEM PROPERTIES Specific internal energy u Specific enthalpy h u pv Any extensive property has an associated intensive property given by itself divided by the mass of the system Trabajo Specific heat u cv T v E n v i r o n m e n t a l h cp T p w p dv Relationship for specific heats for an ideal gas d d r T r ( p v) dT dT Mayer relationship dh d u pv cv r dT dT c p cv r 3 P h y s i c s THE FIRST LAW APPLIED TO AN IDEAL GAS q du w q cv dT p dv E n v i r o n m e n t a l q cv dT d ( p v) v dp (cv r )dT v dp c p dT v dp d ( p v) v dp p dv q c p dT v dp q dh v dp dh du p dv v dp Remark: q c p dT v dp 4 P h y s i c s IDEAL GASSES MIXTURE. DALTON’S MODEL • • • An ideal gas consists on a set of non interacting particles whose volume is very little if compared with the total volume occupied by the gas. Non interacting particles minds negligible forces from one particle to another. Every component in the mixture behaves as if it were the only component occupying the whole volume available at the same temperature the mixture has. As a consequence: every component exerts a partial pressure, being the sum of all partial pressures the total pressure of the mixture. pi p ni RT V nRT V pi ni ni yi p n n1 n2 ... ni ... E n v i r o n m e n t a l Molar fraction The partial pressure of a component in a mixture is proportional to its molar fraction. 5 P h y s i c s PHASE: Aggregation state physically homogeneous having the same properties E n v i r o n m e n t a l PHASE CHANGES: Transitions between solid, liquid, and gaseous phases typically involve large amounts of energy compared to the specific heat The latent heat is the energy released or absorbed during a change of state CHANGES OF STATE AT CONSTANT PRESSURE: Entalphy S L 80 kcal/kg Water: L S 540 kcal/kg 6 P h y s i c s CHANGES OF STATE IN WATER Let us consider ice at 1 atm If heat were added at a constant rate to a mass of ice to take it through its phase changes to liquid water and then to steam, the energies required to accomplish the phase changes would be as follows: T (ºC) E n v i r o n m e n t a l water + steam ice + water 100 540 kcal/kg 80 kcal/kg 0 1 kcal/kg·ºC 0.5 kcal/kg·ºC ice water steam heat The change líquid steam involves a great amount of energy! 7 P h y s i c s MOIST AIR Moist air: dry air + water steam (dry air composition: see following slide) Moist air in contact with liquid water is described according the following model: 1) Dry air and water steam behave as independent ideal gasses (then the presence of each of them do not affect the behaviour of the other) 2) The equilibrium of the liquid water and steam phases is not affected by the presence of the air Steam Dry air Moist air Líquid Saturated air 8 E n v i r o n m e n t a l P h y s i c s SATURATED AIR What is the vapour pressure? Pressure of a vapour given off by (evaporated from) a liquid or solid, caused by atoms or molecules continuously escaping from its surface. In an enclosed space, a maximum value is reached when the number of particles leaving the surface is in equilibrium with those returning to it; this is known as the saturated vapour pressure or equilibrium vapour pressure Vapour pressure is increasing up to... Componentes mayoritarios atmósfera Dry air (majority components) (% volumen) N2 78% E n v i r o n m e n t a l O2 21% Ar 0.93% Otros 0.04% Saturated vapour pressure: function of T QUESTION: WHY IS MOIST AIR LESS DENSE THAN DRY AIR AT SAME TEMPERATURE? http://www.theweatherprediction.com/habyhints/260/ 9 P h y s i c s Liquid-steam equilibrium (water) SATURATION: Presion de vapor del agua (liq) en funcion de la temperatura 0.100 E n v i r o n m The phase diagram of water e n http://www.lsbu.ac.uk/water/ phase.html t a Properties of Water and l Vapour pressure 0.080 P (bar) 0.060 0.040 0.024 0.020 0.000 0 10 Liquid water and steam phases coexists. The saturation vapour pressure is given by the liquidvapour curve as a function of temperature. 20 30 40 50 Steam in SI-Units (Ernst Schmidt) Springer-Verlag (1982) T (ºC) Triple point coordinates: 0.01 ºC, 0.00611 bar 10 P h y s i c s Linear interpolation Presion de vapor del agua (liq) en funcion de la temperatura 0.100 T (ºC) 0.01 5.00 10.0 15.0 20.0 25.0 30.0 35.0 40.0 45.0 0.080 P (bar) 0.060 0.040 0.020 1 i 2 0.000 0 10 20 30 40 50 Pi P1 P (bar) 0.00611 0.00872 0.01228 0.01705 0.02339 0.03169 0.04246 0.05628 0.07384 0.09593 E n v i r o n m e n t a l Ti T1 P2 P1 P T2 T1 h T (ºC) P(38º C ) 0.06632 bar 11 y s i c s MOISTURE CONTENT OF THE AIR Specific humidity (or moisture content of air) is the ratio of the mass of water to the mass of dry air in a given volume of moist air Specific humidity Mass of water vapor or = Mass of dry air Mixture rate w mv ms kg vapor/kg dry air Relationship between partial pressure of vapor, total pressure and specific humidity: The partial pressure from a component of a gasses mixture is proportional to its molar fraction (Dalton) mv Mv mv w ms pv p p mv ms w mv 1 M v Mv Ms M v ms M s yv mv Mv mv ms Mv Ms pv w p w Mv 0.622 Ms Remark: v indicates vapor s indicates dry air 12 E n v i r o n m e n t a l P h y s i c s EXEMPLES . Determine the vapor pressure in air with specific humidity 6 g kg-1, when the total pressure is 1018 mb. w 0.006 p p 1018 9.7 mb v w 0.006 0.622 . . . . .. . . . .. . . . . . . . . . Determine the specific humidity of an air mass at a total pressure of 1023 mb if the partial pressure of vapor is 15 mb. w pv 15 0.622 0.00926 kg vapor/kg dry air p pv 1023 15 Calculator for atmospheric moisture http://www.natmus.dk/cons/tp/atmcalc/atmocalc.htm 13 E n v i r o n m e n t a l P h y s i c s RELATIVE HUMIDITY Relative humidity: quotient between the molar fraction of water vapor in a given sample of damp air and the molar fraction of water vapor in saturated air at the same temperature and pressure. y v yv , sat T , p As the molar fraction and vapor partial pressure are proportional, the relative humidity can be also expressed as pv yv p pv , sat yv , sat p pv pv , sat T , p Another form In the troposphere p >> pv,sat w wsat pv p v p pv p pv , sat pv , sat p pv , sat p w wsat 14 E n v i r o n m e n t a l P h y s i c s EXEMPLE Consider an air mass at 1010 mb and 20 ºC in which the partial vapor pressure is 10 mb. Calculate its relative humidity, actual specific humidity and saturation specific humidity. pv 10 0.428 (43%) pv ,sat T , p 23.39 w wsat pv 10 0.622 0.00622 kgkg-1 p pv 1010 10 pv ,sat 23.39 0.622 0.0147 kgkg-1 p pv ,sat 1010 23.39 T (ºC) 0.01 5.00 10.0 15.0 20.0 25.0 30.0 35.0 40.0 45.0 P (bar) 0.00611 0.00872 0.01228 0.01705 0.02339 0.03169 0.04246 0.05628 0.07384 0.09593 E n v i r o n m e n t a l P wsat w pv,sat pv T 15 P h y s i c s the temperature at which air must be cooled at constant pressure in order for it to become saturated with respect to a plane surface of water. Atmospheric Science: An Introductory Survey by Wallace & Hobbs Dew point: Presion de vapor delofagua funcion la temperatura Pressure vapor water(liq) as aen function of de temperature E n v i r pv w40 ºC o p pv n m 0.020 0.622 0.0126 kg kg 1 e 1.010 0.020 n t a pv w10 ºC l 0.100 The air keeps its specific humidity but increases its relative humidity 0.080 P (bar) 0.060 Exemple. Damp air mass cooling down from 40 ºC up to 10 ºC (pv = 20 mb, total pressure 1010 mb) 0.040 0.020 0.012 p pv 0.000 P 0.012 h T (ºC) 0.622 0.0748 kg kg 1 y 1.010 0.012 Dew point 17.5 ºC s i What is the initial relative humidity? And the final one? c 16 s http://weathersavvy.com/Q-dew_point1.html 0 10 20 30 40 50 TEMPERATURE AND HUMIDITY DAILY CYCLE If the vapor of water in the air remains constant... 100 35 24 mb MAXIMUM OF TEMPERATURE 25 80 60 MINIMUM OF MOISTURE MINIMUM OF TEMPERATURE Relative humidity % TEMPERATURE DAILY CYCLE MAXIMUM OF MOISTURE 30 Temperature ºC E n v i r o n m e n t a l Constant vapor pressure MOISTURE DAILY CYCLE 40 20 0 3 6 9 12 Hora 15 18 21 24 17 P h y s i c s ENTHALPY Specific internal energy u Specific enthalpy h u pv The heat content, usually called the enthalpy, of air rises with increasing water content. This hidden heat, called latent heat by meteorologists and air conditioning engineers, has to be supplied or removed in order to change the relative humidity of air, even at a constant temperature. This is relevant to conservators. The transfer of heat from an air stream to a wet surface, which releases water vapour to the air stream at the same time as it cools it, is the basis for psychrometry and many other microclimatic phenomena. Control of heat transfer can be used to control the drying and wetting of materials during conservation treatment. The enthalpy of dry air is not known. Air at zero degrees celsius is defined to have zero enthalpy. The enthalpy, in kJ/kg, at any temperature, t, between 0 and 60C is approximately: below zero: h = 1.005t h = 1.007t - 0.026 http://www.natmus.dk/cons/tp/atmcalc/ATMOCLC1.HTM#enthalpy 18 E n v i r o n m e n t a l P h y s i c s Enthalpy of air-water vapor mixture Remark: v indicates vapor s indicates dry air H H s H v ms hs mv hv H Hs Hv m hs v hv ms ms ms ms Sensible heat: Specific (kJ/kg dry air) h hs w hv Sensible heat is defined as the heat energy stored in a substance as a result of an increase in its temperature Really the sensible heat is the same as enthalpy; the heat absorbed or transmitted by a substance during a change of temperature which is not accompanied by a change of state Units: kJ/kg dry air o en kcal/kg dry air (specific magnitude). Specific heat of dry air is 0.24 kcal/kg Latent heat: The heat released or absorbed per unit mass by a system in a reversible isobaricisothermal change of phase. In meteorology, both the latent heats of evaporation (or condensation), fusion (melting), and sublimation of water are important http://www.shinyei.com/allabout-e.htm#a19 19 E n v i r o n m e n t a l P h y s i c s ADIABATIC SATURATION PROCESS Adiabatic isolation T2 T1 2 1 Air flows across a pipe or duct adiabatically insulated where there is an open water reservoir. As air moves around, its specific humidity increases. It is assumed that air and water are in contact time enough until saturation is reached. The enthalpy of the wet air remains constant because the adiabatic isolation. As a consequence, the air temperature decreases when the saturated air leaves the pipe. T2 = Tsa About adiabatic saturation and humidity http://www.taftan.com/xl/adiabat.htm http://www.shinyei.com/allabout-e.htm Adiabatic saturation temperature 20 E n v i r o n m e n t a l P h y s i c s PSYCHROMETER Determination of w specific humidity of the air from three properties: pressure p, temperature T and adiabatic saturation temperature Tsa dry wet T Tsa It consists of two thermometers, one of which (the dry bulb) is an ordinary glass thermometer, while the other (wet bulb) has its bulb covered with a jacket of clean muslin which is saturated with distilled water prior to an observation. When the bulbs are suitably ventilated, they indicate the thermodynamic wetand dry-bulb temperatures of the atmosphere. E n v i hs (Tsa ) hs (T ) w' hv (Tsa ) hliq (Tsa ) w r hv (T ) hliq (Tsa ) o n m pv (Tsa ) w' e p pg (Tsa ) n t Wet bulb temperature Adiabatic saturation temperature a l Psichrometric chart M J Moran, H N Shapiro. Fundamentos de Termodinámica Técnica. Reverté (1994) 21 P h y s i c s Psychrometric chart VALID FOR A GIVEN PRESSURE E n v i r o n m e n t a l h v w, pv T (wet bulb) T (dry) Density of the moist air Specific volume (kg/m3) (m3/kg) http://www.taftan.com/thermodynamics/SPHUMID.HTM v 1 ms mv V V ms mv 22 P h y s i c s E n v i r o n m e n t a l 23 P h y s i c s EXEMPLE An air mass at 30 ºC having a 30% relative humidity undergoes an adiabatic saturation process. Then it is cooled down to 13.5 ºC, and after it is warmed up to 19 ºC. What is its final relative humidity? How much has been changed its specific humidity ? = 0.0095-0.0080 = = 0.0015 kg·kg-1 70% 18 ºC 30% 13.5 ºC 0.0095 0.0080 30 ºC 19 ºC 24 E n v i r o n m e n t a l P h y s i c s AIR PARCEL An air parcel is a glob of atmospheric air containing the usual mixture of non-condensing gases plus a certain amount of water vapor. Its composition remains roughly constant whereas this glob moves across the atmosphere from one site to another. Water in the gaseous form exists in any parcel of air with relative humidity greater than 0%. If the amount of water vapor (and other environmental conditions) is such that the relative humidity of the air parcel reaches 100%, it is said that the parcel is saturated. Under conditions of saturation, water in the vapor form can change its phase from vapor to liquid. Then that water vapor condenses into liquid water droplets When phase changes occur, there is a readjustment of the forms of energy associated with the water molecules. In the vapor phase, water has a relatively large amount of internal energy represented by its looser internal molecular structure. When vapor condenses to liquid, the internal energy of the water molecule in the liquid phase is smaller, owing to its tighter molecular structure. If liquid freezes into solid water (ice), the internal energy is reduced further owing to the much tighter packing of water molecules in the solid phase. 25 E n v i r o n m e n t a l P h y s i c s AIR PARCEL: MODEL We’ll consider that air parcels obey the following model: E 1 Any air parcel is adiabatically isolated and its temperature changes adiabatially n when it rises or descends. v i Are we able to calculate temperatures from that or some related formula? PV constant r o 2 The movement of air parcels is slow enough to make possible to assume that their n m kinetic energy is a very little fraction of their total energy. e n 3 It is assumed that any air parcel is in hidrostatic equilibrium with its environment: t it has the same pressure that its environment has. a l What does hidrostatic equilibrium mean? 26 P h y s i c s HIDROSTATIC EQUATION Air column, density Air mass contained in dz: S dz Weight of air contained in dz: gS dz S p+dp Pressure forces: -Sdp Ascending: dz z Descending: gSdz p Net pressure force: pS S ( p dp) S p S ( p dp) S dp The net pressure force goes upwards, because dp is a negative quantity 27 E n v i r o n m e n t a l P h y s i c s HIDROSTATIC EQUATION (Continued) We assume that every air layer is near equilibrium S Weight equilibrates the pressure forces p+dp -Sdp dp g dz S dp gS dz dz z gSdz p As a function of specific volume: 1 v g dz v dp 28 E n v i r o n m e n t a l P h y s i c s VIRTUAL TEMPERATURE V ms Virtual temperature is an adjustment applied to the real air temperature to account for a reduction in air density due to the presence of water vapor mv Moist air = = dru air + + water vapor Density of moist air: ms mv s v V s: density that the same dry air mass ms would have if the dry air were the only component in the volume V “Partial” densities v: density that the same water vapor mass mv would have if the water vapor were the only component ps rs sT Ideal gas pv rv vT Dalton’s law p ps pv p pv pv rsT rvT 29 E n v i r o n m e n t a l P h y s i c s Tvirtual p pv pv rsT rvT T T p w 1 1 v 1 1 p we p rsT pv rs p 1 1 p rv rsT Tvirtual pv 1 1 p rs M v 0.622 rv M s T 1 pv 1 p The ideal gas equation can be written as: p rs Tvirtual Moist air pressure Virtual temperature definition Tvirtual Constant of dry air Density of moist air Virtual temperature is the temperature that dry air should have so that its density be the same than that of the moist air at the same pressure. Moist air is less dense than dry air virtual temperature is larger than absolute temperature Virtual temperature calculator: http://www.csgnetwork.com/virtualtempcalc.html 30 E n v i r o n m e n t a l P h y s i c s POTENTIAL TEMPERATURE Potential temperature is the temperature that a parcel of dry air would have if it were brought dry adiabatically from its original position to a standard pressure p0 (generally the value 1000 mb is taken as the reference p0). ADIABATIC PROCESS q c p dT v dp 0 c p dT dp 0 r T p rT c p dT dp 0 p p v rT T c p dT r T Dry air p p0 dp p cp T p ln ln r p0 r 287 J K 1 kg 1 0.286 cp 1004 J K 1 kg 1 cp p T r p0 r cp p0 p T T constante p0.286 31 E n v i r o n m e n t a l P h y s i c s PSEUDOADIABATIC CHART T constante p0.286 0 All points in this line have the same potential temperature Exemple. An air parcel at 230 K lies in the 400 mb level and goes down adiabatically up to the 600 mb level. Calculate its final temperature. 10 P (mb) 100 230 K Adiabatic dropping 200 =100K =200K =300K =400K =500K 300 constant 400 600 259 K 800 1000 100 200 300 400 T (K) 32 E n v i r o n m e n t a l P h y s i c s E n v i r o n m e n t a l 33 P h y s i c s Continuous lines in K: Dry adiabatics Along these lines the potential temperature is constant ( cte) E n v i r o n m e n t a l Dashed lines in K: Pseudoadiabatics (for moist air, wet bulb cte) Continuous lines in g/kg: Saturation mixing ratio lines (specific humidity for saturation ws) 34 P h y s i c s USE OF PSEUDOADIABATIC CHART Exemple An air mass at 1000 mb and 18 ºC has a mixed ratio of 6 gkg-1. Find out its relative humidity and its dew point temperature. * Plot the T, p coordinates on the thermodynamics diagram (red point) * Read the saturation mixing rate. See that ws = 13 gkg-1 * Relative humidity w 6 0.46 (46%) wsat 13 * Dew point temperature: draw a horizontal line across the 1000 mb ordinate up to reaching the saturation mixing ratio line corresponding to the actual mixing ratio (6 gkg-1). Its temperature is 6 ºC, that is to say, when reaching this temperature a water vapor content of 6 gkg-1 become saturating, then liquid water condenses. 35 E n v i r o n m e n t a l P h y s i c s Exemple An air parcel at 1000 mb and 18 ºC has a mixing ratio of 6 gkg-1. Find out its humidity and dew point w 6 0.46 (46%) ws 13 ws = 13 gkg-1 1000 mb Dew point 6 ºC 18 ºC 36 E n v i r o n m e n t a l P h y s i c s LIFTING CONDENSATION LEVEL The level where a wet air parcel ascending adiabatically becomes saturated E n v i r o n m e n t a l During the lifting process the mixing ratio w and the potential temperature remain constant, however the saturation mixing ratio ws drops because the temperature is decreasing. Saturation is reached when the the saturation mixing ratio equals the actual mixing ratio w. 37 P h y s i c s NORMAND’S RULE • The ascending condensation level of an air parcel can be found in the pseudoadiabatic chart in the intersection point of the following lines: • the potential temperature line (dry adiabatic line) in the point determined by the temperature and pressure of the air parcel; • the equivalent potential temperature line (pseudoadiabatic line) passing through the point indicating the wet bulb temperature and the pressure of the air parcel; • the saturation mixing ratio line (constant humidity line) passing through the point indicating the dew point and the pressure of the air parcel; 38 E n v i r o n m e n t a l P h y s i c s Air parcel at pressure p, temperature T, dew point TR and wet bilb temperature Tbh. E n v i r o n m e n t a l Condensation level dry adiabatic line p constant wsat constant Sat. mixing ratio line p Tbh T pseudoadiabatic line sat constant 1000 mb TR bh T 39 P h y s i c s EXEMPLE 1. Lifting condensation level A) An air parcel at 15 ºC has a dew point temperature of 2 ºC. It lifts adiabatically from the 1000 mb level. Find out its lifting condensation level and the temperature in this level. B) If this air parcel goes on ascending over the condensation level and reaches a level 200 mb above, find out its final temperature and the amount of water condensed during the ascending process. 40 E n v i r o n m e n t a l P h y s i c s B) If this air parcel goes on ascending over the condensation level and reaches a level 200 mb above, find out its final temperature and the amount of water condensed during the ascending process. 2.0 g/kg E n v i r o n m e n t a l 630 mb Condensado: 4.5-2.0=2.5 g/kg 4.5 g/kg 830 mb A) An air parcel at 15 ºC has a dew point temperature of 2 ºC. It lifts adiabatically from the 1000 mb level. Find out its lifting condensation level and the temperature in this level. 1000 mb -15 ºC TR=2 ºC -1 ºC 15 ºC 41 P h y s i c s 6 0.5 12 (50%) 770 mb 12 g·kg-1 6 g·kg-1 TR=4.5 ºC T=15 ºC EXEMPLE 2 An air parcel at 900 mb and 15 ºC has a dew point temperature of 4.5 ºC. Find out the lifting condensation level, the mixing ratio, relative humidity, its wet bulb temperature, the potential temperature and the wet bulb potential temperature. 8.5 ºC 13 ºC 23.5 ºC 42 E n v i r o n m e n t a l P h y s i c s THE FIRST LAW APPLIED TO AN IDEAL GAS q du w q cv dT p dv E n v i r o n m e n t a l q cv dT d ( p v) v dp (cv r )dT v dp c p dT v dp d ( p v) v dp p dv q c p dT v dp q dh v dp dh du p dv v dp Remark: q c p dT v dp 43 P h y s i c s LAPSE RATE Rate at which temperature decreases with height dT dz K/km ºC/km A positive value indicates decrease of T with height Troposphere: general decrease in T with height Environmental lapse rate (ELR): it is the actual temperature of air we can measure (observed air temperature at any height) Dry adiabatic lapse rate (DALR): rate which a non-saturated air parcel cools at it rises Saturated (wet) adiabatic lapse rate (SALR): rate which a saturated air parcel cools at it rises 44 E n v i r o n m e n t a l P h y s i c s DRY ADIABATIC LAPSE RATE (DALR) Rate which a non-saturated air parcel cools at it rises Consider a raising air parcel First law q c p dT v dp q c p dT g dz 0 Pressure and density decrease with height, then as an air parcel rises it expands and cools dT dz aire seco g s cp g dz v dp Adiabatic process Hydrostatic equation g = 9.81 ms-2 cp = 1004 Jkg -1K-1 A physical change of the state of the air parcel that does not involve exchange of energy with the air surrounding the air parcel. s = 0.0098 Km-1 = 9.8 Kkm-1 45 E n v i r o n m e n t a l P h y s i c s SATURATED ADIABATIC LAPSE RATE (SALR) When the air is saturated, condensation occurs Latent heat of vaporization is released That keeps the air parcel warmer than it would otherwise Decrease in temperature with height is not as great as it would be for dry air SALR is dependent on the amount of moisture on the atmophere dT sat dz aire More moisture in the atmosphere… … the greater will be the release of condensation heat 4 K km-1 Range for sat sat MORE MOISTURE … warmer the air will remain 9 K km-1 LESS MOISTURE 46 E n v i r o n m e n t a l P h y s i c s STATIC STABILITY FOR NON-SATURATED AIR Environmental lapse rate (ELR) Height Case <s A B s - >0 dT dz Initial conditions TA TB STABLE ATMOSPHERE When raising, the air parcel pressure evens up to that of its environment dT 0 0 dz What will happen if we consider an ascending movement of the non-saturated air parcel ? Density of raising air (A is colder) is bigger than density of environmental air B s Temperature A restoring force inhibiting the vertical movement appears Positive static stability When the ELR is SMALLER than dry adiabatic lapse rate s The air parcel tends to return to its original level instead of remaining on A Could you figure out the same problem for descending non-saturated air? 47 E n v i r o n m e n t a l P h y s i c s STATIC STABILITY FOR NON-SATURATED AIR (2) Environmental lapse rate (ELR) Height Case <s ...and < 0 A B s - >0 STABLE ATMOSPHERE dT 0 0 dz When raising, the air parcel pressure evens up to that of its environment dT dz Initial conditions Density of raising air (A is colder) is bigger than density of environmental air B s TA What will happen if we consider an ascending movement of the non-saturated air parcel ? TB Temperature Negative static stability The ELR is negative (of course, it is SMALLER than that of the dry air) A restoring force inhibiting the vertical movement appears The air parcel tends to return to its original level instead of remaining on A Could you figure out the same problem for descending non-saturated air? 48 E n v i r o n m e n t a l P h y s i c s THERMAL INVERSION Very cold air Warm air layer E n v i r o n m e n t a l Cold air Thermal inversions play a significant role on the contaminants gathering http://www.sma.df.gob.mx/sma/gaa/ meteorologia/inver_termica.htm About thermal inversions http://www.aviacionulm.com/meteotemperatura.html http://www.sagan-gea.org/hojared/hoja20.htm http://www.rolac.unep.mx/redes_ambientales_cd/capacitacion/Capitulo1/1_1_2.htm http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermal_inversion 49 P h y s i c s STATIC UNSTABILITY FOR NON-SATURATED AIR Environmental lapse rate (ELR) Height Case >s B A s - < 0 dT 0 0 dz TB TA When raising, the air parcel pressure evens up to that of its environment dT dz Initial conditions s UNSTABLE ATMOSPHERE Density of raising air (A is warmer) is smaller than density of environmental air B Temperature A force in favor of further vertical movement appears Static unstability ELR is BIGGER than the dry air lapse rate The air parcel tends to move away from its original level 50 E n v i r o n m e n t a l P h y s i c s STATIC STABILITY NON-SATURATED AIR (SUMMARY) Stable Positive static stability <s Negative static stability <s (inversion) Unstable Neutral stability: Convective mixing <0 s >s =s s 51 E n v i r o n m e n t a l P h y s i c s EXEMPLE ON STABIBLITY AND UNSTABILITY Environmental lapse rate (ELR) Dry Adiabatic Lapse Rate (DALR) What will happen to an unsaturated air parcel initially lying on the ground? The air parcel temperature here is lower than sourrounding air temperature Any air parcel which overtakes this level sinks to equilibrium level Inversion level ELR > DALR s As the air parcel is unsaturated, it lifts along the dry adiabatics Ground temperature 52 BIBLIOGRAPHY Basic books: John M Wallace, Peter W Hobbs, Atmospheric Science. An introductory survey. Academic Press (1997) M J Moran, H N Shapiro. Fundamentos de Termodinámica Técnica. Reverté (1994) On humidity and its measure http://www.usatoday.com/weather/whumdef.htm Enthalpy of change of state data http://www.adi.uam.es/docencia/elementos/spv21/sinmarcos/graficos/entalpiadevaporizacion/evapor.html http://www.adi.uam.es/docencia/elementos/spv21/sinmarcos/graficos/entalpiadefusion/efusion.html http://www.gordonengland.co.uk/conversion/specific_energy.htm On specific heat http://www.engineeringtoolbox.com/36_339qframed.html Stability and unstability discussions http://www.geocities.com/silvia_larocca/Temas/emagrama2.htm http://www.cesga.es/telecursos/MedAmb/medamb/mca2/frame_MCA02_3.html http://www.qc.ec.gc.ca/meteo/Documentation/Stabilite_e.html http://www.usatoday.com/weather/wstabil1.htm (usa unidades inglesas) http://www.indiana.edu/~geog109/topics/08_stability/LapseStability_CB_L.pdf Clouds http://seaborg.nmu.edu/Clouds/types.html Other related sites http://www.usatoday.com/weather/whumdef.htm http://www.usatoday.com/weather/wwater0.htm 53 E n v i r o n m e n t a l P h y s i c s PSEUDOADIABATIC CHART 700 320 pressure mb 310 E n v i r o n m e n t a l 750 300 800 290 850 280 900 950 1000 2.0 3.0 4.0 6.0 8.0 10.0 12.0 15.0 20.0 25.0 30.0 1050 -10 -5 0 5 10 15 Continuous red lines labelled in K: dry adiabatics 20 25 30 35 40 temperature ºC Continuous black lines labelled in g·kg -1: saturation mixing ratio Discontinuous grey unlabelled lines: pseudoadiabatics 54 P h y s i c s PSEUDOADIABATIC CHART 700 320 pressure mb 310 E n v i r o n m e n t a l 750 300 800 290 850 280 900 950 1000 2.0 3.0 4.0 6.0 8.0 10.0 12.0 15.0 20.0 25.0 30.0 1050 -10 -5 0 5 10 15 Continuous red lines labelled in K: dry adiabatics 20 25 30 35 40 temperature ºC Continuous black lines labelled in g·kg -1: saturation mixing ratio Discontinuous grey unlabelled lines: pseudoadiabatics 55 P h y s i c s