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Ch' 12 Meteorology

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Meteor is Greek for 'high in the air'. Hydormeteors cloud droplets and forms of precipitation with water. ... A hygrometer is used to measure relative humidity. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ch' 12 Meteorology


1
Ch. 12 - Meteorology
  • Meteorology the study of the atmosphere
  • Meteor is Greek for high in the air.
  • Hydormeteors cloud droplets and forms of
    precipitation with water.
  • Lithometeors condensation nuclei dust, smoke,
    haze, etc.
  • Electrometeors thunder and lightning.
  • Weather current state of the atmosphere.
  • Climate long-term variations in weather for a
    particular area.
  • Usually of 30 years or more.

2
  • The Suns radiation does not heat the whole
    surface for its round it relies on the green
    house effect.
  • The radiation hits the Earth at angles ranging
    from 0 to 90 degrees.
  • The continual motion of air and water reallocates
    heat energy among Earths surface, oceans, and
    atmosphere and brings it into balance.
  • At what angle does it heat the Earth the most?
  • 90 degrees (direct) ? illustrate
  • Some areas around the equator receive close to
    direct radiation at noon all year long.

3
  • During what part of the day is it coolest?
  • Just before sunrise
  • During what part of the day is it hottest?
  • 300 to 400 Why?
  • Cloudy skies trap the heat clear skies allow it
    to release rapidly
  • Which would cause a higher risk of sunburn?
  • When is it the warmest time of the year in the
    Northern Hemisphere?
  • July 21
  • Southern Hemisphere?
  • Dec. 21
  • What is the coolest time in the N.H.?
  • What is the coolest time in the S.H.?
  • Illustrate tilt of the Earth

4
  • Air Masses - these are huge sections of the lower
    troposphere that have the same kind of weather
    throughout it.
  • They usually maintain the same position for days
    or even weeks.
  • The weather in an air mass is determined by the
    region it originated in. Cold vs. Warm.
  • Warm and dry from continental tropic (cT), warm
    and humid from maritime tropic (mT), cold and dry
    continental polar (cP), cold and humid maritime
    polar (mP), and artic (A).
  • Fig. 12.3 (pg. 303) Table 12-1 (pg. 304)

5
Weather Systems
  • Coriolis effect the air coming from the poles
    moves to the right in the northern hemisphere and
    to the left in the southern hemisphere. This is
    due to the rotation of the Earth.
  • Trade winds
  • Occurs at 30 North South latitude.
  • The air sink, warms and moves toward the equator
    in a westerly direction.
  • Causes high pressure
  • Prevailing westerlies
  • Between 30 60 north and south latitude in
    circulation pattern opposite that of the trade
    winds.
  • Blowing from the west to the east
  • Responsible for movement of weather across the
    U.S.

6
  • Polar easterlies
  • Between 60 the poles.
  • Similar to the trade winds
  • Jet Streams narrow bands of fast,
    high-altitude, westerly winds.
  • They strongly influence the temperature and
    pressure on either side of the jet stream.
  • This causes wind.
  • Polar jets stream Subtropical jet stream fig.
    12-6.
  • The deeper it dips or the steeper it rises the
    more influence it has on temperature changes.

7
Fronts
  • Front is a boundary of different air masses.
  • They have different densities due to different
    temperatures, pressure, and humidity.
  • They can bring big changes in weather.
  • 1. Cold Fronts cold, dense air displaces warm
    air up. As the warm air rises it cools and
    condenses clouds, showers, and sometimes
    thunderstorms.
  • 2. Warm Front warm air displaces cold air. The
    warm air develops a gradual frontal slope unlike
    a cold front extensive cloudiness and
    precipitation.
  • 3. Stationary Front neither air mass advances
    the other. The boundary stalls seldom have
    extensive cloud and heavy precipitation.
  • 4. Occluded Front cold air mass moves so
    rapidly that it overtakes a warm front. The cold
    air wedges the warm air upward. Precipitation is
    common on both sides of the front.

8
Pressure System
  • Rising air is associated with low pressure and
    sinking air is associated with high pressure.
  • High Pressure air sinks and spreads away from the
    center. The deflection of the air to the right
    caused by the Coriolis effect makes the overall
    circulation around a high pressure center move
    clockwise in the northern hemisphere and
    counter-clockwise in the southern hemisphere.
  • Cold air masses are associated with high
    pressure.
  • Low Pressure air rises and must be replaced by
    air from outside the system so it flows inward.
    The air in a low pressure system turns
    counter-clockwise in the northern hemisphere.

9
  • It is hard for clouds to form when air sinks.
    Thus, high-pressure systems are usually
    associated with fair weather, while low-pressure
    systems are associated with clouds and
    precipitation.
  • A wave cyclone usually begins along a stationary
    front. Some imbalance in temperature, pressure,
    or density causes part of the front to move south
    as the cold front and another part of the front
    to move north as a warm front. This causes a
    counterclockwise rotation.

10
Gathering Weather Data
  • A thermometer is the most common weather
    instrument used by meteorologist.
  • What measures air pressure?
  • Barometer
  • At sea level the air pressure is 760 mm or 30 in.
  • As air pressure goes up the Hg is forced up in
    its measuring column (mercury barometer)
  • An aneroid barometer contains a vacuum inside a
    metal chamber in which the chamber contracts or
    expands with changes in air pressure.

11
  • Anemometers are used to measure wind speeds.
  • A hygrometer is used to measure relative
    humidity.
  • Ceilometers may be used to measure the height of
    cloud layers and amount of cloud cover.
  • Data must be gathered at the same time at many
    different location. Why?
  • Our Project Globe weather station needs to be
    taken at International time at solar noon, so all
    the data collected internationally has
    consistency.

12
  • National weather stations use a radiosonde
    (weather balloon), which has temperature, air
    pressure, and humidity sensors that send back
    readings to the ground station. Tracking the
    balloon in the upper-level provides accurate
    snapshots of atmospheric conditions.
  • Doppler Radar wave frequencies change speed
    (energy) as rain winds caused by a thunderstorm
    moves towards or away from the radar station.
  • Accurate wind speeds, precipitation, and storm
    intensity can be used by meteorologists.

13
Weather Analysis
  • To record weather data for a particular site at a
    particular time a station model is used.
  • Fig. 12-15 (pg. 317)
  • Isopleths are used to plot nationwide or global
    data. The isopleths are lines that connect
    points of equal or constant values.
  • Lines of equal pressure isobars (winds)
  • Lines of equal temperature isotherms
  • Meteorologist use very sophisticated lab
    equipment, computers, models.
  • Meteorologists are very accurate compared to
    about 15-20 years ago.

14
  • Digital forecasts are highly dependent on the
    density of the data available.
  • An analog forecast is also used to compare
    current weather patterns to past patterns.
  • Even high-tech computers cannot predict all
    factors that affect the weather.
  • Interpreting a Weather Map (pg. 322).
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