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* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Meteorology The study of the Earth’s atmosphere and weather systems. Weather The day to day changes in the atmosphere at a particular location on Earth. Climate A widespread, long-lasting and recurring conditions of the atmosphere. • The amount of water vapor in the air • Written as a percentage of the amount of vapor the air would have if it were saturated (meaning there is as much water vapour that it can hold at that specific temperature). • The movement of heat due to particles colliding (banging into each other). • Highly energetic atoms or molecules collide with less energetic atoms or molecules, giving them energy (heat). • Highly energetic molecules move from one place to another, carrying thermal energy with them. • Atoms or molecules give off electromagnetic waves; the energy carried by these waves is converted back to thermal energy when the waves interact with some form of matter. • The amount of heat required to raise the temperature of 1.0 g of a substance by 1°C. • Clouds are made of tiny droplets of water • The way they are formed depends on conditions of the wind, temperature and humidity. • Puffy clouds with flat bases. • Form in endless layers; You cannot see shapes or forms in these clouds because they are flat • Wispy clouds made from ice crystals that form when water vapour changes directly from a gas to a solid • Nimbostratus clouds: clouds that bring rain • Stratocumulus clouds: lumpy low lying clouds that form in layers • Condensation of atmospheric water vapour which falls to the Earth. • When water droplets in a cloud combine or grow to a diameter between 0.5 mm and 2 mm they will fall to the ground as rain. • Most rain begins as crystals that stick together and melt as they fall through the warmer air. • The crystals in clouds stick together and form larger flakes. • If the air is cold the snowflakes will fall to the ground • Sleet is formed when snowflakes meet warm air and turn into rain but then meet colder air closer to the ground and freeze again. • When they freeze again they form ice pellets called sleet. • This forms when the air is warm enough to allow rain to fall but the ground is below the freezing point. • When the rain hits the ground it freezes instantly. • Hail begins as frozen raindrops known as hailstones. That are carried by the wind into large clouds. • If the temperature inside the cloud is at or below freezing they combine with droplets that coat and freeze on the hailstones which then fall to the ground. • An instrument that measures relative humidity based on the absorption of water by certain materials • An instrument that measures atmospheric pressure based on volume changes of a sealed, partly evacuated cell • An instrument that measures temperature • An instrument that measures wind speed • An instrument that indicates the direction from which the wind is blowing • A specialized radar that figures out velocity data about objects at a distance. • Used to locate precipitation, calculate its motion, and estimate its type (rain, snow, hail, etc.) • An instrument that collects and measures rainfall • A hydrogen or helium filled balloon that carries a mini weather station up through the atmosphere