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CXEGA09ALR4X_OL19.indd 2 3/2/07 6:28:18 PM Photo Credits: Cover: James Kay/Jupiter Images. p. 8: Karen Lawrence/Grant Heilman Photography. All other images © Harcourt )FYOUHAVERECEIVEDTHESEMATERIALSASEXAMINATIONCOPIESFREEOFCHARGE(ARCOURT 3CHOOL0UBLISHERSRETAINSTITLETOTHEMATERIALSANDTHEYMAYNOTBERESOLD2ESALEOF EXAMINATIONCOPIESISSTRICTLYPROHIBITEDANDISILLEGAL 0OSSESSIONOFTHISPUBLICATIONINPRINTFORMATDOESNOTENTITLEUSERSTOCONVERTTHIS PUBLICATIONORANYPORTIONOFITINTOELECTRONICFORMAT CXEGA09ALR4X_OL19.indd b 4/4/07 10:43:57 AM Copyright © by Harcourt, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher. Requests for permission to make copies of any part of the work should be addressed to School Permissions and Copyrights, Harcourt, Inc., 6277 Sea Harbor Drive, Orlando, Florida 32887-6777. Fax: 407-345-2418. HARCOURT and the Harcourt Logo are trademarks of Harcourt, Inc., registered in the United States of America and/or other jurisdictions. Printed in Mexico ISBN-13: 978-0-15-366688-9 ISBN-10: 0-15-366688-9 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 050 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 09 08 07 Visit The Learning Site! www.harcourtschool.com CXEGA09ALR4X_OL19.indd 1 3/29/07 4:22:26 PM What Is Weather? You have seen weather every day of your life, but do you know what it is? Weather is what the air is like at a certain place and time. Clouds and precipitation are part of weather. Precipitation is water that falls from clouds to Earth. Rain, snow, sleet, and hail are precipitation. How hot or cold it is and the speed and direction of the wind are also part of weather. Air pressure and humidity are part of weather, too. Humidity is the amount of water vapor in the air. Georgia receives much more rain than snow. Both rain and snow are precipitation. 2 CXEGA09ALR4X_OL19.indd 2 4/5/07 12:23:59 PM Climate is different from weather. Climate is the pattern of weather an area goes through over a long time. It might be raining in your town today, but that does not mean that your town is in an area where it rains a lot. You would have to look at a record of the weather in your area over many years to find out the climate of your town. Georgia’s climate is not too hot and not too cold. Georgia has hot, sticky summers. Summer days often are in the mid-80s. Winter days often are nearly 50 degrees. Georgia gets 45 to 55 inches of rain every year. It almost never snows in Georgia, except in the Blue Ridge Mountains, in the northern part of the state. MAIN IDEA AND DETAILS What is the difference between weather and climate? The hottest temperature ever recorded in Georgia was 112 degrees Fahrenheit (44.4 degrees Celsius). That high temperature happened on August 20, 1983, in Greenville, Georgia. 3 CXEGA09ALR4X_OL19.indd 3 4/10/07 4:03:31 PM The Sun It’s a beautiful day. You feel the sunlight warm your skin. You know that the sun is causing the nice weather. But did you know that the sun affects weather in many ways? On most days, it is cool in the morning. It gets warmer in the afternoon. It cools off again in the evening. This happens because the air warms up as the sun rises and heats it. The air cools off as the sun sets. This is called a daily weather pattern. The sun also drives seasonal weather patterns. Spring and summer in the United States are warm because the Northern Hemisphere receives more direct sunlight for more hours. Fall and winter are cool because the Northern Hemisphere receives less direct sunlight for fewer hours. The sun heats Earth unevenly. Places closer to the equator get more sunlight than places closer to the poles. So places closer to the equator have warm climates. Places closer to the poles have cold climates. Georgia Northern Hemisphere B Southern Hemisphere The United States is in the Northern Hemisphere, which has warm springs and summers and cool falls and winters. 4 CXEGA09ALR4X_OL19.indd 4 4/5/07 12:26:12 PM Wind is caused by the sun’s uneven heating of Earth’s air. Air moves when it is heated unevenly. Wind causes precipitation and other kinds of weather to move, instead of staying in one spot. The Northern Hemisphere gets more direct sunlight in the spring and summer CAUSE AND EFFECT Why because of the way that are afternoons warm and Earth is tilted on its axis. evenings cool? The equator runs through Brazil. Places closer to the equator have a much warmer climate than places that are closer to the poles. CXEGA09ALR4X_OL19.indd 5 5 4/10/07 4:04:27 PM The Water Cycle Have you ever made ice cubes or watched them melt in a glass? Have you ever wondered why puddles disappear? Water can change from a solid to a liquid to a gas and back again. It goes through all three forms as part of the water cycle. The water cycle happens when water moves from the surface of Earth to the air and back again. The water cycle affects weather. The sun drives the water cycle. When the sun warms water on Earth’s surface, some of the water changes from a liquid to a gas. This is called evaporation. The gas form of water is called water vapor. You can’t see it, but it is there just the same. The water that you drank today might be the same water that a dinosaur drank millions of years ago! The same amount of water has always existed on Earth. It moves around because of the water cycle. CONDENSATION EVAPORATION 6 CXEGA09ALR4X_OL19.indd 6 4/10/07 4:48:48 PM Water vapor becomes part of the air. The air carries it high above Earth, where the air is cooler. The water vapor cools and condenses into a liquid. This is called condensation. When water vapor cools, it condenses on tiny pieces of dust in the air. The condensed water and dust form clouds or fog. Fog is a cloud that forms near the ground. As more water vapor condenses, the clouds grow heavy with water. Then the water falls from the clouds as precipitation. Precipitation can be rain, which is a liquid, or snow, sleet, or hail, which are solids. Some precipitation soaks into the ground. Some flows along the ground until it joins a body of water such as an ocean. From there, the cycle repeats again. MAIN IDEA AND DETAILS Name and describe the three parts of the water cycle. PRECIPITATION 7 CXEGA09ALR4X_OL19.indd 7 4/10/07 4:48:59 PM The Oceans If you live near a coast, you might already know that oceans affect weather and climate. Oceans heat up and cool down much more slowly than land does. Oceans take in a lot of heat from the sun during the summer. The air over oceans then stays cooler than it would be if the water did not absorb the heat. During the winter, oceans slowly release that heat into the air above them. This keeps temperatures on Earth from getting too hot or too cold. The sun heats different parts of the oceans unevenly. Uneven heating makes the air temperature above the ocean uneven. Remember that uneven air temperature causes wind. Water on the surface of the oceans is pushed forward by winds. This makes currents. A current is a stream of water that flows like a river through the ocean. In the summer, Georgia’s beaches are cooler than they would otherwise be because of the cool air coming from the ocean. 8 CXEGA09ALR4X_OL19.indd 8 3/29/07 4:23:49 PM Ocean currents affect weather all over the world. The Gulf Stream current brings warm temperatures to Georgia and the eastern coast of the U.S. It then flows on to Europe. Because it is near the Atlantic Ocean, Georgia’s coastline has warmer weather than other parts of the state. Currents carry warm water a long way. Warm currents cause the climate of some places to be warmer than it would otherwise be. Currents also carry cold water a long way. Cold currents cause the climate of some places to be colder than it would otherwise be. The oceans also affect where it rains and how much it rains. Warm water evaporates faster than cold water does. So, where the ocean is warmer, clouds form and it rains. CAUSE AND EFFECT What keeps temperature on Earth from getting too hot or too cold? 9 CXEGA09ALR4X_OL19.indd 9 4/5/07 1:44:04 PM Air Masses Earlier we talked about how the sun affects weather. You now know that winds are caused by the sun’s uneven heating of Earth’s air. Uneven heating causes air to move. It moves in large air masses. An air mass is a large body of air that all has the same temperature and humidity. An air mass can be warm or cold, humid or dry. It depends on whether the air mass forms over an ocean or land. It also depends on whether the air mass forms near the equator or near the poles. An air mass that forms over the Atlantic Ocean near the equator will be humid and warm. This diagram shows how a cold air mass pushes a warm air mass upward to form a cold front. 10 CXEGA09ALR4X_OL19.indd 10 3/29/07 4:24:01 PM When an air mass over a place changes, the weather in that place changes. The line where two air masses meet is called a front. Most weather changes happen along fronts. There are two kinds of fronts. A cold front forms where a cold air mass moves under a warm air mass and pushes it up. The warm air mass cools, and the water vapor inside it condenses very quickly. This causes short periods of heavy rain, thunderstorms, or snow. A warm front forms where a warm air mass moves over a cold air mass. The warm air slowly slides up and over the cold air. Clouds form ahead of the front. This causes rain or snow that usually lasts a long time. MAIN IDEA AND DETAILS Describe the two kinds of fronts and how they form. Cold fronts often cause thunderstorms. In 2005, Georgia had 279 thunderstorms. 11 CXEGA09ALR4X_OL19.indd 11 4/5/07 1:45:17 PM Predicting Weather You might have seen people talking about the weather on a TV news show. Meteorology is the study of weather. Meteorologists are scientists who study weather. They use different tools to measure weather. This helps them figure out what the weather will be in the coming days or weeks. A thermometer measures the air temperature. If the air temperature drops during the day or rises at night, that signals the weather will change soon. A barometer measures air pressure. If a barometer rises, it means heavier air is moving in, which means less humidity and a lower chance of rain. If a barometer falls, it means more humidity and a higher chance of rain. Meteorologists use barometers to measure air pressure. Changing air pressure means changing weather. 12 CXEGA09ALR4X_OL19.indd 12 4/5/07 1:55:56 PM Meteorologists are people who study and predict the weather. This meteorologist is explaining weather patterns in the United States. An anemometer measures wind speed. A wind vane measures wind direction. Wind often brings changes in weather. If it is winter and a wind starts blowing from the north, you can predict that the weather will be colder soon. A hygrometer measures humidity. If humidity goes up, it might rain soon. Much of Georgia has A rain gauge measures how much rain very humid summers, falls. Rain gauges help meteorologists so meteorologists figure out how much rain usually falls in there use hygrometers a certain place. That helps them figure a lot! out the climate of the place. MAIN IDEA AND DETAILS Why do scientists measure weather? 13 CXEGA09ALR4X_OL19.indd 13 4/5/07 1:47:31 PM Weather Maps Meteorologists use weather maps in their work. Weather maps show what the weather is like in a place. They use pictures to show the weather. A sun picture means it is sunny. A picture of a cloud with rain means that it is rainy. The picture for a warm front is a red line with half circles on the side of the direction in which the front is moving. A blue line with triangles shows a cold front. Meteorologists might write temperatures on a weather map or show them with certain colors. They use an H to show a place that has high air pressure. They use an L to show a place that has low air pressure. MAIN IDEA AND DETAILS How do meteorologists show cold and warm fronts on a weather map? This map of the United States shows warm and cold fronts and areas of high and low pressure. 14 CXEGA09ALR4X_OL19.indd 14 4/5/07 1:49:43 PM Summary Weather is the state of the air at a certain place and time. Climate is the kind of weather a place goes through over a long time. Several things affect the weather. The sun drives daily and seasonal weather patterns. It also heats Earth unevenly. That causes warm and cold climates and wind. The water cycle is also driven by the sun. It carries water through evaporation, condensation, and precipitation. The oceans heat and cool the land near them. Ocean currents carry warm or cool water all over the world. This affects climate. The oceans also affect where and how much it rains. Air masses form fronts, which bring precipitation. Meteorologists use tools to measure the weather. This helps them figure out what the weather will be like in the future. They use weather maps with pictures to show what the weather is like in a place. The sun affects weather in many ways. 15 CXEGA09ALR4X_OL19.indd 15 4/5/07 1:50:46 PM Glossary air mass (air mas) A large body of air all of which has similar temperature and humidity (10, 11, 15) anemometer (an•uh•MAHM•uht•er) An instrument for measuring wind speed (13) barometer (buh•RAHM•uht•er) An instrument for measuring air pressure (12) climate (KLY•muht) The pattern of weather an area experiences over a long period of time (3, 5, 8, 9, 13, 15) condensation (kahn•duhn•SAY•shuhn) The process by which a gas changes into a liquid (7, 15) current (KUR•uhnt) A stream of water that flows like a river through the ocean (8, 9, 15) evaporation (ee•vap•uh•RAY•shuhn) The process by which a liquid changes into a gas (6, 7, 15) front (FRUHNT) The border where two air masses meet (10, 11, 14, 15) humidity (hyoo•MID•uh•tee) A measurement of the amount of water in the air (2, 10, 12, 13) hygrometer (hy•GRAHM•uht•er) An instrument for measuring humidity (13) meteorology (meet•ee•uh•RAHL•uh•jee) The study of weather (12) precipitation (pree•sip•uh•TAY•shuhn) Water that falls from clouds to Earth (2, 3, 5, 7, 15) water cycle (WAW•ter SY•kuhl) The constant movement of water from the surface of Earth to the air and back again (6, 7, 15) water vapor (WAW•ter VAY•per) The gas form of water (2, 7, 11) weather (WETH•er) The condition of the atmosphere at a certain place and time (2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15) 16 CXEGA09ALR4X_OL19.indd 16 4/5/07 1:53:28 PM Think and Write 1. How does the water cycle work? Describe the three parts of the cycle. 2. MAIN IDEA AND DETAILS How do oceans affect the weather? 3. CAUSE AND EFFECT What might happen to weather if there is rising humidity? 4. Narrative Writing Pretend that you are a meteorologist. Write a story about how you use weather tools to predict what the weather will be like the next day in your town. Make sure to include all the tools described on pages 12-13 of the Reader. Hands-On Activity Find a weather map online or in a newspaper or a magazine. Do not look at the box that tells you what the picture means. See if you can figure out which pictures, numbers, letters, or colors show warm and cold fronts, temperatures, precipitation, and high or low pressure areas. School-Home Connection Talk with family members about Georgia’s climate and what the weather is usually like in your part of the state. Then make a prediction about what the weather will be like this fall, this winter, next spring, and next summer. Make sure to include predictions about temperatures and precipitation. iii CXEGA09ALR4X_OL19.indd 17 4/5/07 1:54:37 PM