Download Chapter 8

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts
no text concepts found
Transcript
Chapter 8
AIR MASSES
Learning Objectives
After reading, studying, and discussing this chapter, students should be able to do the
following:
1. Describe what an air mass is and describe the concept of air-mass weather.
2. List two criteria that an air-mass source region must meet.
3. Discuss the basis of air-mass classification.
4. Describe the ways that air masses are modified.
5. List the three factors that the daily weather we experience depends on.
6. Discuss the weather conditions associated with cP, mP, mT, and cT air masses that
influence North America.
7. Define the terms listed in the vocabulary review.
Answers to the Chapter Review
1.
An air mass is a very large body of air that is characterized by relative uniformity
of temperature and humidity at any given altitude. When an air mass is moving over
an area, that region will probably experience fairly constant weather conditions for
perhaps several days, a situation termed air-mass weather.
2.
A source region must be an extensive and physically uniform region characterized
by a general stagnation of atmospheric circulation.
1
3.
These regions are not likely to produce air masses because converging winds are
constantly bringing air with unlike temperatures and humidities into the area.
4.
Air masses are classified on the basis of their moisture content (continental versus
maritime) and their temperature (tropical, polar, arctic). Continental polar (cP) is a
dry and cold or cool air mass; maritime polar (mP) is a humid and cool air mass;
maritime tropical (mT) is a humid and warm or hot air mass; continental tropical (cT)
is a dry and hot air mass.
5.
Since arctic air masses form over the ice-covered Arctic Ocean, they consistently
have moisture characteristics associated with a continental source region (cA).
6.
The lower case letter k indicates that an air mass is colder than the surface over
which it is passing, whereas the lower case letter w indicates that the air mass is
warmer than the surface below. A k air mass is warmed from below, and thus it is
made less stable. Therefore, such an air mass is often characterized by cumuliform
clouds, showers, or thunderstorms, should precipitation occur, and good visibility
except during rain. On the other hand, since a w air mass is chilled from below, it is
more stable. Therefore, if a w air mass has clouds, they will be stratiform clouds, and
precipitation, if any, will be light. In addition, poor visibility and advection fog are
associated with w air masses.
7.
Wintertime cP air masses are normally colder than mP air masses because the
continents are colder than the ocean surface during winter.
8.
Such mechanical or dynamic modifications are usually independent of the
changes produced by surface cooling or heating. Convergence or forceful lifting over
a highland barrier will cause the air mass to become less stable. The same happens
when an air mass encounters a low-pressure system. Conversely, subsidence
associated with high-pressure centers acts to stabilize an air mass.
2
9.
Maritime tropical and continental polar air masses are most important to the
weather east of the Rockies. Continental polar air masses dominate in winter, often
bringing cold waves. Moisture from maritime tropical air masses is the primary
source of much, if not most, of the precipitation received in the eastern two-thirds of
the United States.
10.
Maritime polar air masses from the North Pacific source region are most
important to the weather along the Pacific coast.
11.
Because there are no major barriers to their movement between their source
region and the Gulf of Mexico. Thus, these cold air masses can sweep with relative
ease far southward into the United States.
12.
Initially, the cP air mass is cold and stable. As it moves across the warmer Great
Lakes, it becomes a cPk air mass. The addition of heat and moisture from the warm
water surface renders the air mass unstable, and heavy lake-effect snow is the result.
13.
Since the general airflow is from west to east, these air masses usually move away
from North America toward Europe.
14.
Maritime tropical air from the Gulf of Mexico.
15.
a. cT air from northern Mexico and the American Southwest
b. mT air from the Gulf of Mexico
c. mP air from the Northern Pacific
d. mT air from the Gulf of Mexico
e. mP air from the Northern Atlantic
Answers to the Chapter Problems
3
1.
See Figure 8-11.
2.
Each station has its maximum snowfall in November. This maximum probably
occurs in November because air temperatures are cold enough to produce snow and are
still warm enough to allow a great deal of moisture to remain in the air.
3.
The two rainiest months are July and August. The rainiest months occur during
the summer because of the North American monsoon. In the summer, a low-pressure
center develops over Arizona that draws in warm, moist air from the Gulf of California
(some moisture may come from the Gulf of Mexico as well). This supply of moisture,
coupled with the convergence and upward flow of the thermal low, is responsible for the
precipitation Albuquerque experiences during the hottest months.
Suggested Activity
1.
On a map of North America and the surrounding oceans, have students label the
locations of the various air-mass source regions, including their temperature and humidity
characteristics and the directions in which they are likely to move.
4