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Chapter 12 • When people discuss the weather, they’re describing the current state of the atmosphere. • Atmospheric properties are given to describe weather conditions, such as: • • • • Temperature Air Pressure Wind speed Amount of moisture in the air Temperature Heat • A measurement of how rapidly or slowly molecules move around • Faster molecules have a higher temperature • Slower molecules are cooler • Can be measured in degrees Fahrenheit, degrees Celsius, or Kelvin. • The transfer of energy that occurs because of a difference in temperature between substances • Heat flows from higher temperatures of an object to areas of lower temperature • The dew point is the temperature to which air must be cooled at constant pressure to reach saturation • Saturation is when the air holds as much water vapor as possible. • Without saturation, condensation cannot occur. • Condensation occurs when matter changes state from a gas to a liquid. • In general, as you go up in the troposphere, the temperature goes down 10 degrees C for every 1000m increase in altitude. • Lifted Condensation Level (LCL) is the height at which condensation occurs. • The height of LCL often corresponds to the base of clouds. • Temperature is proportional to pressure • Higher temperature higher pressure • Lower temperature lower pressure • Temperature is inversely proportional to density • Higher temperature lower density • Lower temperature higher density • There is an exception to this rule, known as temperature inversion, because the temperature increases with height in an atmospheric layer Wind Relative Humidity • Cool air is more dense than warm air so it sinks, forcing warm air upward. The differences in density and pressure causes wind • Ultimately, wind is a rush of air that makes an attempt to relieve an imbalance between warm (less dense) air and cool (more dense) air • Wind is faster and stronger at higher altitudes where there are fewer structures to provide friction • The ratio of water vapor in a volume of air relative to how much water vapor that volume of air is capable of holding • Expressed as a percentage • 100% is holding all of the water vapor it can (saturated) • 50% is holding half of the water vapor it can • Varies with temperature • The warmer the air, the more moisture it can hold because there is more space between the air molecules • Warm (less dense) air rises and cold (more dense) air sinks. Clouds will form when warm, moist air rises, expands, and cools in a convection current. • As the air reaches its dew point, the water vapor in the air condenses around condensation nuclei (small particles in the atmosphere around which cloud droplets can form), they combine with millions of others to form a cloud. • Clouds can also form when wind encounters a mountain and has no choice but to go up. This is referred to as orographic lifting. • When two different air masses meet, this too can create uplift and clouds will form (warm air is pushed up). • How quickly an air mass cools is based on its resistance to rising (stable air stays put). This is referred to as stability. • The energy that is transferred to the gas during the change of state is stored in the water vapor and will not be released until condensation occurs. This is referred to as latent heat. • Within a cloud, the process by which cloud droplets collide and join together to form a larger droplet is called coalescence. As this process continues, the droplets become too heavy and gravity eventually takes over… leading to precipitation. • Clouds are generally classified according to a system developed in 1803. • Low clouds form below 2000m • Middle clouds form between 2000m and 6000m • High clouds form above 6000m Clouds are named based on their shape: 1. Cirrus – Wispy, stringy clouds 2. Cumulus – white, puffy clouds 3. Stratus – layered sheets of clouds 4. Nimbus – gray rain clouds, low in the sky 5. Fog – cloud that forms in contact with Earth’s surface When cloud droplets collide and join together to form a larger droplet it is referred to as coalescence Once droplets become too heavy, they fall to the Earth as precipitation. Precipitation is all forms of water that fall from the clouds. Four main types: 1. Rain 2. Snow 3. Sleet 4. Hail Meteorology is the study of atmospheric phenomena. • Weather – the current state of the atmosphere • Climate – long-term variations in weather for a particular area; average weather over a long period of time A Question of Balance • The surface of the Earth heats up unevenly by the sun since it is curved and sits on its axis • Those areas that receive the majority of the sun’s radiation over the year are warmer An air mass is a large body of air that takes on the characteristics of the area over which it forms. • The area from which air masses form comes from is called a source region • Air masses are either Maritime (form over water) or Continental (form over land) • Air masses are also either tropical (warm) or polar (cold) • So when they are classified they are labeled as “maritime tropical,” which tells us where they form and their temperature Air Mass Modification – when air mass moves, it starts to acquire some of the characteristics of the new surface beneath it. Essentially, they transfer heat from one location to another Coriolis Effect – the rotation of the Earth causes moving particles such as air to be deflected to the right in the northern hemisphere and to the left in the southern hemisphere Doldrums • primarily windless zones at the equator (they are calm and sometimes light) Trade Winds • occurs between the equator and 30oN and S latitude Prevailing Westerlies • flows between 30o and 60o N and S of the Equator Polar Easterlies • between 60o and the N and S poles Jet Stream • narrow bands of fast, highaltitude, westerly winds • Narrow region separating two air masses of different densities. • Typically, air masses have different temperature and moisture. Types of Fronts: 1. Cold Front – Where cool dense air meets warm air, moving it steeply upward • • • 2. Fastest of all front systems Move furthest while maintaining identity Can result in clouds, showers and storms Warm Front – Where warm air replaces cooler air and gradually rises • • • Tend to move slowly Less violent than cold front Can result in extensive cloudiness and precipitation 3. Stationary Front – When a front does not move, or barely moves as the differences between the air masses are small. Air masses “stall” • Patterns similar to a warm front 4. Occluded Front – When a rapidly moving cold air mass overtakes a warm front wedging the warm air upward • Can cause precipitation Rising air is associated with low pressure Sinking air is associated with high pressure This movement combined with the Coriolis effect results in rotating pressure systems. High-Pressure Systems Sinking air reaches the surface and spreads away from the center The Coriolis effect causes it to spin in a clockwise direction in the northern hemisphere Associated with fair weather Low-Pressure Systems As air rises, there is a flow of air into the center to replace it. The Coriolis effect causes it to rotate counter-clockwise in the northern hemisphere Associated with clouds and precipitation Thermometer – device used to measure temperature Barometer – device used to measure air pressure Anemometer – device used to measure wind speed Hygrometer - device used to measure relative humidity Ceilometer – device used to measure the height of cloud layers and estimates the amount of sky covered by clouds To make accurate forecasts, meteorologists must gather atmospheric data at heights up to 30,000m At present, the instrument of choice is a balloon-borne package of sensors called a Radiosonde • Sensors measure temperature, air pressure, and humidity. • Readings are constantly sent back by radio signal, for tracking • Provide accurate snapshots of atmospheric conditions • Very expensive The term radar stands for “radio detecting and ranging” Weather Radar – radio waves detect where rain is falling at any given point. • range of 400km in diameter Doppler Radar • Doppler Effect – the change in wave frequency that occurs in energy as the energy moves toward or away from an observer. • Used to plot the speed at which raindrops move toward or away from a radar station • Provides good estimation of wind speeds associated with precipitation areas • Provides a distinct advantage over conventional radar systems One of the main uses of satellites in orbit around Earth is to observe weather. Mounted cameras take photos of Earth at regular intervals. Able to track clouds, but not necessarily precipitation Infrared Imagery • Detects differences in thermal energy, which are used to map either cloud cover or surface temperatures • Objects that radiate warmth at slightly different frequencies show up as different colors • Allows meteorologists to determine the temperature of a cloud, which is useful in detecting strong thunderstorms and their potential to produce severe weather Station Model – a record of weather data for a particular site at a particular time • Allows meteorologists to fit a large amount of data into a small space • Gives meteorologists a uniform way of communicating weather data (Ex) Isobars – pressure Isotherms - temperature • Meteorologists use isobars, isotherms, and station model data to analyze current weather conditions before they can move on to forecasting. • Isotherms help identify frontal systems • Isobars help identify pressure systems Short-Term Forecast: • Digital Forecast – relies on numerical data from computers, satellites, and models • Analog Forecast –involves comparing current weather patterns to patterns that took place in the past (assuming that the weather will behave in a similar fashion) • The more data collected, the more accurate the shortterm forecast will be Long-Term Forecast: • Usually can’t be trusted if they are more than three days out SEVERE WEATHER THUNDERSTORMS At any given moment, nearly 2000 thunderstorms are occurring around the world. 1. Abundant source of moisture in the lower levels of the atmosphere 2. A mechanism to lift the air to allow moisture to condense and release latent heat 3. The portion of the atmosphere where clouds grow must be unstable, to allow rising and cooling of air necessary to stop the cloud growth. Conditions of Formation of Thunderstorms Lightning is electricity caused by the rapid rush of air in a cumulonimbus cloud. A lightning bolt forms when friction between updrafts and downdrafts separates electrons from some of their atoms creating positive ions and negative ions. This creates regions of air with opposite charges. A channel of negatively charged air moves toward the ground and a channel of positively charged ions rushes upward from the ground to meet it, creating an illumination called lightning. Lightning ■ Lightning heats the air to around 30000°C, which is five times HOTTER than the surface of the Sun! ■ As the super-heated air rapidly expands and contracts, it creates a sound called thunder. ■ Because sound travels more slowly than light, you typically see lightning before you hear thunder even though they are actually generated at the same time! Thunder ■ Hail: precipitation in the form of balls or lumps of ice, occurring most frequently in the central US. Most common during Spring ■ Flood: occur when a thunderstorm moves slowly over one location, dumping all its rain in one place Other Dangers of Thunderstorms The rising, moist updrafts and the falling, cool downdrafts form a convection cell that produces the wind gusts that are associated with thunderstorms. Sometimes, these convection cells become more drastic in size and form what is referred to as a supercell. Supercells are deep-rotating updrafts with potential to generate severe / extreme weather. Supercells Tornadoes A tornado is a violent, whirling column of air in contact with the ground ■ Before reaching the ground, it’s called a funnel cloud ■ Often associated with a super cell, which is the most severe thunderstorm Characteristics ■ Air is made visible by dust and debris drawn into the swirling column or by the condensation of water vapor into a visible cloud ■ Over the area it covers, few storms on Earth can match a tornado’s violence ■ A tornado is caused by wind shear, which is when wind speed and direction change suddenly with height – causing a horizontal rotation near the Earth’s surface ■ An updraft can shift this rotating air into the vertical Formation position ■ As updrafts speed up the rotation, air pressure in the center decreases, creating a pressure gradient between the inside and outside of the tornado – creating violent winds ■ Although devastating, tornadoes typically last only a few minutes. The Fujita Tornado Intensity Scale ranks tornadoes according to the path of destruction, wind speed, and duration – Bottom range is F0 - winds up to 118km/hr – Top range is F5 – winds of more than 500km/hr – Most tornadoes do not exceed the F1 category Tornadoes can occur at any time and at any place, although some times and locations are more conducive to their formation – Most occur in the spring, during late afternoon and evening, when temperature differences are greatest – Most common in the central United States due to colliding cP and mT air masses – More than 700 tornadoes touch down each year in the United States Classification and Distribution TROPICAL STORMS The most violent storm on Earth is within the calm, sunny tropics. Tropical Cyclones ■ Large, rotating, low-pressure storm ■ The strongest tropical cyclones are known in the United States, Mexico, and the Caribbean as hurricanes ■ In the western Pacific Ocean, these storms are referred to as typhoons ■ People living near the Indian Ocean refer to these storms as cyclones Characteristics Tropical Cyclones / Hurricanes require two basic conditions to form: 1. Abundant supply of warm water 2. Some sort of disturbance to lift the warm air and keeprising it These conditions exist in all tropical oceans except the South Atlantic Ocean and the Pacific Ocean west of the South American coast because waters in these areas are cooler. Formation 1. As water evaporates from the ocean, heat is stored in the form of latent heat 2. The heat is released as the air rises and water vapor condenses into clouds and rain 3. The rising air creates a low pressure system at the ocean surface and more air moves in to replace it 4. The Coriolis Effect causes the air to turn counterclockwise, resulting in the rotation of the cyclone 5. Air moving towards center rises and rotates faster, further decreasing pressure in the center Tropical Disturbance - beginning stages, causes the air to rise Tropical Depression - when a disturbance acquires a cyclonic rotation around a center of low pressure Tropical Storm - when winds of the depression reach 65km/hr Hurricane - when winds of the storm reach 120km/hr Eye - calm center of the storm Eyewall - a band immediately surrounding the eye where the winds are the strongest Stages of a Hurricane ■ Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale - classifies hurricanes according to wind speed, air pressure in center, and potential for property damage ■ Ranges from Category 1 (74 mph winds) to Category 5 (+155 mph winds) ■ At Category 3 it is classified as a major hurricane Classifying Hurricanes ■ Hurricanes cause a lot of damage, especially along coastal areas ■ Much of the damage results from violent winds ■ Strong winds move onshore and are responsible for another major threat, storm surges, which is when winds move a mound of water over land ■ Storm surges can be as high as 6m above normal sea level Hurricane Hazards ■ Heat released through condensation of vast amounts of water vapor fuels hurricanes. This condensation produces great amounts of rain RECURRING WEATHER Persistent or repetitive weather can negatively affect agriculture, transportation, and recreation. Floods ■ Natural occurrence in which water spills over the sides of a stream’s banks onto land ■ Can be caused by long thunderstorms, hurricanes, and mild storms that stay in the same area for extended times ■ The main cause of thunderstorm-related deaths in the United States each year Droughts ■ A drought is an extended period of below average rainfall ■ Caused by large high-pressure systems in an area for an extended period of time ■ One of the most extreme droughts occurred during the 1930’s in the central United States (Dust Bowl) Heat Wave Cold Wave ■ A Heat Wave is an extended period of above normal temperatures ■ A Cold Wave is an extended period of below normal temperatures, which can be caused by high pressure systems of continental polar (cP) or Arctic air ■ Can result from long term highpressure systems with few clouds to block the blazing Sun ■ System barely moves because the air currents guiding the highpressure system are weak ■ Increases rate of humidity, leading to a higher heat index (how warm it feels to the human body) ■ Can cause heatstroke, sunstroke, and/or death ■ Wind-Chill: because wind transports heat away from the body, the temperature may feel cooler than it really is ■ The wind-chill factor tells how cold it actually feels to the human body