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Describing weather 13.1 What is weather? • Atmospheric conditions, along with short-term changes, of a certain place at a certain time. • Change can occur within a few hours or a few days • Example: getting caught in a rainstorm on a sunny day vs. sunny weather for a few days in a row Weather variables variable: a quantity that can change • Used to describe weather • Air temperature • Air pressure • Rainfall • Wind speed & direction • Humidity • Cloud coverage • Precipitation Air temperature • The measure of the average kinetic energy of molecules in the air Kinetic energy: energy an object has due to it’s motion • Temperature high: high kinetic energy, molecules are moving fast • Temperature low: low kinetic energy, molecules are moving slow Air pressure • Force that a column of air applies on the air or a surface below it • As altitude increases, air pressure decreases • As altitude decreases, air pressure increases • Air pressure is measured with a barometer and measured in millibars (mb) Wind • As air moves from areas of high pressure to low pressure, it creates wind • Wind direction is the direction from which the wind is blowing • Wind is measured using an anemometer Humidity • Amount of water vapor in the air • When the humidity is high, there is more water vapor in the air • Skin might feel sticky • Sweat might not evaporate from your skin as quickly • Measured in grams of water per cubic meter of air (g/m3) Relative humidity • Amount of water vapor present in the air compared to the maximum amount of water vapor the air could contain at that temperature • When air is saturated, it contains as much water vapor as possible • Temperature determines the maximum amount of water vapor air can contain • Air with a relative humidity of 100% any more moisture and dew or rain will form • Example: sponge absorbing water Dew point • Temperature at which air is saturated and condensation can occur • When the air near the ground becomes saturated, the water vapor in the air will condense to a liquid • If the temperature is above 0 degrees C! dew forms • If the temperature is below 0 degrees C! ice crystals (or frost) form • Higher in the atmosphere, clouds form Clouds and fog • Clouds are water droplets or ice crystals suspended in the atmosphere • When cooling air reaches its dew point, water vapor condenses on small particles in the air and forms droplets • These droplets are surrounded by thousands of others and become visible (as clouds) when they block and reflect light. • Clouds that form near the Earth’s surface are called fog • Fog is a suspension of water droplets or ice crystals close to or at Earth’s surface Precipitation • Water, in liquid or solid form, that falls from the atmosphere • Rain: precipitation that reaches earth’s surface as water droplets • Snow: precipitation that reaches earth’s surface as solid, frozen crystals of water • Sleet: may originate as snow (snow melts as it falls through a layer of warm air and refreezes when it passes through a layer of below-freezing air), or it is freezing rain • Hail: reaches earth’s surface as large pellets of ice (starts off as a small piece of ice that is repeatedly lifted and dropped by an updraft within a cloud, a layer of ice is added with each lifting, when it finally becomes too heavy for the updraft to lift, it falls to earth) The water cycle • Series of natural processes by which water continually moves among oceans, land, and the atmosphere • water vapor enters the atmosphere when water at the ocean’s surface is heated and evaporates • water vapor cools as it rises in the atmosphere and condenses back into a liquid • eventually droplets of liquid and solid water form clouds • clouds produce precipitation, which falls to earth’s surface, continuing the cycle