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Air pressure and atmospheric motion Define the forces that generate winds Explain why there is well-developed westerly flow in the upper troposphere Differentiate between high and low pressure systems Compare and contrast surface and geostrophic winds Describe/read maps of constant pressure surfaces Identify and discuss wind types and the forces that generate them Recognize surface and upper-level atmospheric maps and identify general patterns of windflow Explain monsoonal flow and land-sea breezes Air pressure and atmospheric motion Q: What makes the wind blow? A: Air pressure differences. Air pressure • Force exerted by molecules in atm due to gravity and temperature Air pressure Surface air pressure variability • Average sea level pressure 1013 mb Mercury barometer 1013 mb = 29.91 inches Aneroid barometer Pressure systems • Two types: high and low • Low: associated with clouds and instability. • High: associated with clear conditions and stability Low pressure systems • Cyclone – Converging rising air at surface – Diverging air aloft – Winds rotate counterclockwise in NH – Areas of “light” atmosphere; air is forced into these locations – Unstable surface conditions High pressure system • Anticyclone – Converging air aloft – Diverging sinking air at surface – Winds rotate clockwise in NH – Areas of “heavy” atmosphere; air is forced out of these locations – Stable surface conditions Is the location for these pressure systems the northern or the southern hemisphere? High and low pressure systems • Occur on a variety of spatial and temporal scales – Some pressure systems may be stationary for a long period of time, others may migrate rapidly around the planet – Some pressure systems are closed, others are more belt-like and open Low pressure systems • Types of low pressure systems: tornados, thunderstorms, hurricanes…. Low pressure systems ….., midlatitude cyclones, the ITCZ, thermal lows Low pressure systems: dust devil versus ITCZ Another secret of weather forecasting • The atmosphere is a collection of pressure systems in three dimensions. • Weather forecasting involves looking at surface conditions as well as upper level conditions (aloft, in the upper troposphere) • http://weather.unisys.com/ “Deep” tropospheric phenomena • A midlatitude cyclone is a low pressure at the surface coupled to a low pressure aloft in the upper troposphere • A hurricane is a high pressure aloft and a low pressure at the surface Midlatitude cyclones • Strong, “deep” interaction between surface and upper levels • May travel large distances around the globe Midlatitude cyclone “Shallow” tropospheric phenomena • Thermal low (warm) • Thermal high (cold) – Weak interaction between surface and upper levels – May occur on a daily basis or persist over many months L H Pressure differences initiate….. …….winds • Named according to the direction they blow from • Winds can blow at different directions at different altitudes in the atm • Forces that act on winds: – PGF – CF – Surface friction 1. PGF: Pressure gradient force – winds blow from high to low Where are winds the fastest? 2. Coriolis Force (CF) • Apparent deflection of the winds due to rotation of the Earth – NH winds deflected right – SH winds deflected left Coriolis Force (CF) • CF is not a true force; it is an apparent force arising from the effect of the Earth’s rotation • Deflection is strongest at poles and zero at the Equator • CF acts perpendicular to the direction of motion • CF deflects to the right in the Northern Hemisphere Misconceptions about the Coriolis Force • The CF does not determine the rotation in a drain. 3. Surface friction (SF) • Topography (mnts, elevated plateaus) deflect winds Two major types of winds 1. Geostrophic (upper troposphere winds) – Influenced by PGF and CF only – Wind flow is parallel to isobars/geopotential heights – Geostrophic flow is westerly (west to east) in NH – Shown on geopotential height maps Geostrophic winds on geopotential height map Two major types of winds 2. Surface winds – Influenced by PGF, CF, and SF – Winds cross isobars Types of surface winds • Monsoonal flow – Creates extreme wet and dry seasons Location of thermal highs and lows associated with monsoonal flow Winter Weak monsoonal flow in southwestern US Summer Types of surface winds • Land-sea breeze circulation • Many other different types of surface winds based on local physiography and arrangement of pressure cells. Many have unique names. Sea breeze blowing from ocean to land