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WEATHER AND CLIMATE WEATHER • Refers to the conditions in the atmosphere at a given place and time • Changes from hour to hour and day to day – Temperature – Atmospheric (barometric) pressure – Precipitation – Wind – Humidity – Cloudiness WEATHER • Results from interactions between leading edges of moving warm and cold air masses called fronts • Warm front—warm air replacing cooler air – Less dense air rising over cold. Acts as a moisture condenser forming clouds – Clouds thicken, descend, then rain • Cold front—cold replacing warm – Stays close to ground producing rapidly moving towering clouds (thunderheads) WEATHER • Also affected by changes in atmospheric pressure • Greater at surface • High pressure—cool dense air descends becoming warmer. Generally, clear cool weather • Low pressure—low density, air rises warmer air expands and cools causing condensation forming clouds. Generally, cloudy stormy weather WEATHER • Relative humidity—amt. of water vapor in the air compared to the max. amt the air can hold at a specific temp. • Dew point—temp. at which water vapor saturates from an air mass into liquid or solid. Occurs at 100% humidity CLIMATE • Average weather conditions that occur over a period of years • Changes slowly over hundreds or thousands of years – Temperature—average and extremes – Precipitation—averages, seasonal, distribution – Also includes wind, humidity, fog, cloud cover—seasonal and yearly variations CLIMATE • Wladimir Köppen developed system for classifying climates – Divided into 6 zones—humid equatorial, humid temperate, humid cold, dry, cold polar, and highland climate CLIMATE CHANGE • Measurements showed CO2 levels went from 315 ppm in 1958 to 383 ppm in 2006 • Every May levels drop slightly as plant growth occurs but rises again in the winter CLIMATE CHANGE • Surface temp increased by .6⁰C over past cent w/ most in past 2 decades • Greenhouse gases have increased – CO2 by 31% – CH4 by 151% – N2O by 17% AIR POLLUTION • Not counting CO2 and soil • Americans release 147 metric tons of air pollution/yr. Worldwide 2 billion tons • Air quality has improved over past 20 yrs • 1990 regulation of most hazardous materials began reducing emissions by 1 million tons/yr AIR POLLUTION • Conventional pollutants—7 major pollutants – SO2, CO, particulates, NOx, ozone (O3), lead, volatile organic compounds (VOC’s) – Ozone—released from by combustion. Interacts with UV radiation. Affects lung function SOURCES & PROBLEMS • SO2—colorless corrosive gas. Damages plants and animals. • NOx—highly reactive gases formed by combustion. Gives smog its color part of acid rain • CO—colorless and odorless, highly toxic. Inhibits respiration SOURCES & PROBLEMS • Particulates—dust, ash, soot, lint, smoke, pollen. Leaves residue damaging tissues • VOC’s—organic gases from plants, bogs, termites. Forms photochemical oxidants and makes ozone • Lead &other toxic elements—lead, mercury, arsenic. Highly reactive damaging nervous system EFFECTS OF AIR POLLUTION • Breathing polluted air increases heart attacks, respiratory disease and lung cancer • A 5-10 yr decrease in life expectancy if you live in highly polluted areas (LA & Baltimore) • Bronchitis & Emphysema common conditions – Accts for 50,000 deaths EFFECTS OF AIR POLLUTION • Plants are extremely sensitive • SO2 & sulfuric acid destroys tissues • Cell membranes damaged • Chlorophyll destroyed • Metabolism, growth & development disrupted EFFECTS OF AIR POLLUTION • Smog & haze reduces visibility – Without visibility would reach 150 km (90 mi) instead of the 15 km (9mi) we are used to • Acid Rain damages plants, lowers pH, destroys buildings & monuments