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MET 1010 Introduction to Weather Dr. Arturo Rodriguez Miami Dade College North Campus Chapter 1: The Earth’s Atmosphere Overview of the Earth’s atmosphere Vertical structure of the atmosphere Weather and climate Overview of the Earth’s Atmosphere • The atmosphere, when scaled to the size of an apple, is no thicker than the skin on an apple. The Earth’s Atmosphere The earth’s atmosphere is a thin gaseous envelope comprised mostly of nitrogen (N2) and oxygen (O2), with small amounts of other gases, such as water vapor (H2O) and carbon dioxide (CO2). Almost 99% of the atmosphere lies within a mere 30 km (about 19 mi) of the earth’s surface. The Earth’s Atmosphere Composition of the Atmosphere. Table 1.1 shows the various gases present in a volume of air near the earth’s surface. Notice that nitrogen (N2) occupies about 78% and oxygen (O2) about 21% of the total volume of dry air. These percentages hold up to an elevation of about 80 km (or 50 mi). Table 1-1, p. 3 The Earth’s Atmosphere Water vapor is an extremely important gas in our atmosphere. The concentration of water vapor varies greatly from place to place, and from time to time. Close to the surface in warm tropical locations may account for up to 4% of the atmospheric gases, whereas in colder artic areas, its concentration may dwindle to a mere fraction of a percent. The Earth’s Atmosphere The changing of water vapor into liquid water is called condensation, whereas the process of liquid water becoming water vapor is called evaporation. In the lower atmosphere, water is everywhere. It is the only substance that exists as a gas, a liquid, and a solid at those temperatures and pressures normally found near the earth’s surface. The Earth’s Atmosphere Water vapor releases large amounts of heat –called latent heat- when it changes from vapor into liquid water or ice. Latent heat is an important source of atmospheric energy, especially for storms, such as thunderstorms and hurricanes. Water vapor is a potent greenhouse gas because it strongly absorbs a portion of the earth’s outgoing radiant energy. Thus, water vapor plays a significant role in the earth’s heat-energy balance. The Earth’s Atmosphere Carbon dioxide (CO2), a natural component of the atmosphere, occupies about 0.037% of a volume of air. CO2 enters the atmosphere mainly from the decay of vegetation, but it also comes from volcanic eruptions, the exhalations of animal life, from the burning of fossil fuels (such as coal, oil and natural gas), and from deforestation. The Earth’s Atmosphere The removal of CO2 from the atmosphere takes place during photosynthesis, as plants consume CO2 to produce green matter. The CO2 is then stored in roots, branches and leaves. The oceans act as a huge reservoir for CO2, as phytoplankton in surface water fix CO2 into organic tissues. Estimates are that the oceans hold more than 50 times the total atmospheric CO2 content. The Earth’s Atmosphere Fig. 1.3 reveals that the atmospheric concentration of CO2 has risen more than 18% since 1958 when it was first measured at Mauna Loa Observatory in Hawaii. This increase means that CO2 is entering the atmosphere at a grater rate than it is being removed. The increase appears to be due to the burning of fossil fuels; however, deforestation also plays a role. Fig. 1-4, p. 5 The Earth’s Atmosphere Measurements of CO2 also comes from ice cores. In Greenland and Antarctica, tiny bubbles of air trapped within the ice sheets reveal that before the Industrial Revolution, CO2 levels were stable at about 280 parts per million (ppm). Since the early 1800s, however, CO2 levels have increased by more than 25%. The Earth’s Atmosphere With CO2 levels presently increasing by about 0.4% annually (1.5 ppm/year), scientists now estimate that the concentration of CO2 will likely rise from its current value of about 375 ppm to a value near 500 ppm toward the end of the XXI Century. CO2 is another important greenhouse gas because, like water vapor, it traps a portion of the earth’s outgoing energy. The Earth’s Atmosphere Mathematical models that predict future atmospheric conditions estimate that increasing levels of carbon dioxide (and other greenhouse gases) will result in a global warming of surface air between 1.4ºC and 5.8ºC (about 2.5ºF and 10.5ºF) by the year 2100. Such warming could result in a variety of consequences. The Earth’s Atmosphere Carbon dioxide and water vapor are not the only greenhouse gases. Other greenhouse gases include methane, nitrous oxide and chlorofluorocarbons. The Earth’s Atmosphere The Early atmosphere. The earth’s first atmosphere (some 4.6 billion years ago) was most likely hydrogen and helium, as well as methane and ammonia. A second, more dense atmosphere, evolved from the gases that escaped from the earth’s hot interior, mostly water vapor, carbon dioxide and some nitrogen. The Earth’s Atmosphere Oxygen, probably began an extremely slow increase in concentration as energetic rays from the sun split water vapor into hydrogen and oxygen. This slow increase in oxygen may have provided enough of this gas for primitive plants to evolve perhaps 2 to 3 billion years ago. The Earth’s Atmosphere Vertical Structure of the Atmosphere. Air Pressure and Air Density. Air density is the number of air molecules in a given space. Air density is greatest at the surface and decreases as we move up in the atmosphere. Fig. 1-5, p.8 The Earth’s Atmosphere Air molecules have weight. This weight act as a force upon the earth. The amount of force exerted over an area of surface is called atmospheric pressure or simply air pressure. Atmospheric pressure always decreases with increasing height. Fig. 1-8, p. 9 The Earth’s Atmosphere Normal atmospheric pressure is: 14.7 pounds/square inch = 1013 .25 milibars (mb) = 1013.25 hectopascals (hPa) = 29.92 in. Hg The Earth’s Atmosphere Layers of the atmosphere. Both air pressure and density decrease with height above the earth. Air temperature however has a more complicated vertical profile. Layers of the Atmosphere vertical temperature profile troposphere stratosphere mesosphere thermosphere • Temperatures, winds, humidity and pressures high above the ground are measured twice-daily by radiosonde. Fig. 1-7, p.10 The Earth’s Atmosphere Air temperature normally decreases from the earth’s surface up to an altitude of about 11km, which is nearly 36,000 feet or 7 mi. The rate of decrease is called the temperature lapse rate. The average lapse rate in the troposphere is about 6.5ºC for every 1000 meters (m) or about 3.6ºF for every 1000 ft The Earth’s Atmosphere The layers of the atmosphere are: Troposphere Stratosphere Mesosphere Thermosphere Exosphere The Earth’s Atmosphere The different layers are separated by boundary regions located at the top of the layers. They are called: Tropopause Stratopause Mesopause The Earth’s Atmosphere TROPOSPHERE Is the region located from the surface of the earth up to approximately 10 to 16 km (6 to 10 mi). Temperature generally decreases with altitude. The word troposphere is derived from the Greek word tropein meaning “to change”. Almost all of what we normally call weather occurs in this layer, where 80% of the atmosphere’s mass is located. The Earth’s Atmosphere STRATOSPHERE Is the region located above the troposphere, at an altitude near 20 km (12 mi) where temperature increases with height. Temperature is increasing because ozone molecules in the stratospheric ozone layer are absorbing solar energy near the top of the stratosphere The Earth’s Atmosphere MESOSPHERE (Middle sphere) Is the region located above the stratosphere. The boundary near 50 km (31 mi), which separates these layers is called the Stratopause, where the average temperature is close to 0 C. The air temperature in the mesosphere decreases with height, a phenomenon due in part to the fact that there is little ozone in the air to absorb solar radiation. The temperature reaches a minimum of about -90 C at the Mesopause. The Earth’s Atmosphere THERMOSPHERE Is the hot layer above the mesosphere. The boundary that separates the lower, colder mesosphere from the warmer thermosphere is the Mesopause at an average altitude of about 85 km (53 mi). The temperature increase, in this layer, is caused by the absorption of energetic ultraviolet (UV) and X-Ray radiation from the Sun. The Earth’s Atmosphere IONOSPHERE The region of the atmosphere above about 80 km is called the ionosphere, since the energetic solar radiation knocks electrons off molecules and atoms, turning them into ions with a positive charge. The ionosphere reflects and absorbs radio waves. The Earth’s Atmosphere IONOSPHERE The ionosphere plays a major role in radio communications. The lower part (called the D region) reflects standard AM radio waves back to earth. At night the D region gradually disappears and AM radio waves are able to penetrate higher into the ionosphere (into the E and F regions) where the waves are reflected back to earth. Fig. 1-11, p. 13 The Earth’s Atmosphere EXOSPHERE At the top of the thermosphere, about 500 km (300 mi) above the earth’s surface is located the exosphere, which represents the upper limit of our atmosphere. It contains mainly oxygen and hydrogen atoms, but there are so few that they rarely collide, and some escape right out into space. The Earth’s Atmosphere Weather & Climate Weather refers to the condition of the atmosphere at any particular time and place. Weather is comprised of the elements of: air temperature clouds air pressure humidity precipitation wind visibility The Earth’s Atmosphere Climate represents the accumulation of daily and seasonal weather events (the average range of weather) over a long period of time. The concept of climate also includes the extremes of weather – heat waves, blizzards, hurricanes, etc –that occur in a particular region. The frequency of these extremes is what distinguish among climate that have similar averages. The Earth’s Atmosphere A Satellite’s View of the Weather Longitude. The lines running from pole to pole are called the meridians. Since the zero meridian (or prime meridian) runs through Greenwich, England, the longitude of any place on earth is simply how far east or west, in degrees, it is from the prime meridian. North America is west of Great Britain and most of the United States lies between 75º W and 125º W longitude. The Earth’s Atmosphere The dotted lines that parallel the equator are called parallels of latitude. The latitude of any place is how far north or south, in degrees, it is from the equator. The line of the equator is 0º, whereas the latitude of the North Pole is 90ºN and that of the South Pole is 90ºS. Most of the United States is located between latitude 30ºN and 50ºN, a region commonly referred to as the middle latitudes. The Earth’s Atmosphere A Look at a Weather Map -The letter L on the map indicates a region of low atmospheric pressure, often called a low. -The letter H represent a region of high atmospheric pressure, called high or anticyclone. -The wind is the horizontal movement of the air. The wind direction is the direction from which the wind is blowing, not the direction toward the wind is moving. Fig. 1-11, p.17 The Earth’s Atmosphere The wind blows around the highs and the lows. The horizontal pressure differences (pressure gradient) create a force that starts the air moving from higher pressure toward lower pressure. The wind speed is the rate at which the air is moving due to the pressure gradient. The Earth’s Atmosphere The new record surface wind gust on Earth is 253 mph in Barrow Island, 31 miles of Australia’s NW coast, during the passage of Tropical Cyclone Olivia on April 10 1996. The previous record was held by Mt. Washington (New Hampshire), a wind gust of 231 mph, set in 1934. There was also, a new record of 212 mph measured during 2008’s Hurricane Gustav in Pinar del Rio, Cuba. The Earth’s Atmosphere Because the earth’s rotation, the winds are deflected toward the right in the Northern Hemisphere –this deflecting force is known as the Coriolis force. This deflection causes the winds to blow clockwise and outward from the center of the highs, and counterclockwise and inward toward the center of the low. The Earth’s Atmosphere -In regions of high pressure, skies are generally clear. We can find generally clear skies and fair weather associated with the regions of high pressure. -The boundary that separates the warm and cold air masses is called a front, across which there is a sharp change in temperature, humidity, and wind direction. The fronts are classified as: cold, warm and occluded. The Earth’s Atmosphere Weather and Climate in Our Lives Weather and climate play a major role in our lives. Weather often dictates the type of clothing we wear, while climate influences the type of clothing we buy. Although weather and climate affect our lives in many ways, their most immediate effect is in our comfort.