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Climate

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Atmosphere Affects Insolation ... This scattering of insolation increases as levels of aerosols increases. As scattering increases insolation to the surface decreases. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Climate


1
Climate
  • Continued

2
Layers of the Atmosphere
  • The atmosphere has 4 distinct layers, each with a
    particular set of properties.
  • Layers are
  • divided by temperature patterns
  • vary in thickness
  • are separated by interfaces with names ending in
    pause.

3
Layers of the Atmosphere
  • The 4 layers of the atmosphere are
  • Thermosphere
  • mesopause
  • Mesosphere
  • stratopause
  • Stratosphere
  • tropopause
  • Troposphere

4
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5
Troposphere
  • Closest to the surface of the Earth
  • Temperature drops as you rise (6.4oC/km)
  • Composition is 78 nitrogen, 20 oxygen, 2 other
    gases (Ar,CO2,Ne,He)
  • Contains most of the dust and water vapor
  • Most weather occurs in this layer

6
Tropopause
7
Stratosphere
  • Layer above troposphere
  • Temperature rises as you rise
  • Very little weather

8
Stratopause
9
Mesosphere
  • Layer above the stratosphere
  • Temperature drops (to -90oC) as you rise

10
Mesosphere Clouds
11
Mesopause
  • Located where the temperature stops falling in
    the mesosphere.

12
Thermosphere
  • The outer, upper layer of the atmosphere
  • Temperatures rise to 1000oC as you rise
  • Very little matter in this layer
  • High temperatures due to x-rays and UV

13
Atmosphere Affects Insolation
  • Absorption the stratosphere absorbs most of the
    ultraviolet radiation while carbon dioxide and
    water vapor in the troposphere absorb most of the
    infrared radiation.
  • Reflection clouds reflect approximately 25 of
    incoming insolation.

14
Atmosphere Affects Insolation
  • Scattering aerosols (water droplets, ice
    crystals, pollutants and dust) in the atmosphere
    cause random reflection of insolation. This
    scattering of insolation increases as levels of
    aerosols increases. As scattering increases
    insolation to the surface decreases.
  • Ex volcanic eruptions increase aerosols and
    greatly reduce insolation to the surface.

15
Atmosphere Affects Insolation
  • Energy conversion some energy is converted to
    potential energy (latent heat) by the evaporation
    of water and the melting of ice and snow. This
    reduces the amount of energy available to heat an
    area and also increases the amount of water vapor
    in the air which also reduces the insolation
    available making for lower temperatures.
  • Energy is also radiated back into space in the
    form of heat (infrared).

16
Surfaces
  • Land surfaces heat up and cool down more rapidly
    than water surfaces.
  • Since good absorbers are also good radiators, the
    land radiates heat to the air above more rapidly
    than water does.
  • So air above the land heats and cools more
    quickly than air over water.

17
Terrestrial Radiation
  • Terrestrial radiation is electromagnetic energy
    given off by the Earths surface.
  • This is in the form of infrared radiation.

18
The Greenhouse Effect
  • The process that allows short-wave energy to be
    transmitted through the atmosphere, but which
    reflects and captures reradiated long wave
    infrared energy is known as the greenhouse effect.

19
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20
Radiative Balance vs. Time
  • Radiative balance occurs when the incoming energy
    equals the outgoing energy.
  • Over long-term periods the Earth seems to be in
    radiative balance
  • Over short-term periods the Earth does not seem
    to be in radiative balance.

21
The Water Budget
  • Evapotranspiration refers to all the moisture
    released into the atmosphere by both evaporation
    and transpiration.
  • A water budget is a monthly account of what
    happens to all the water in a particular location
    over the course of a year.

22
Water Budget Income and Expenses
  • Income in a water budget is the amount of
    precipitation.
  • Expenses in a water budget is the potential
    evapotranspiration.
  • Potential evapotranspiration is the amount of
    water that would evaporate or transpire if the
    water were available.
  • Therefore potential evapotranspiration is highest
    in the summer (when it is hottest), lowest in
    winter (when it is coldest).
  • Large vegetated areas give off more
    evapotranspiration.

23
Factors Affecting Water Budgets
  • Climate affects a water budget since
    evapotranspiration rates are largely dependent
    upon the sun, the factors determining climate
    (temperature and humidity) also affect water
    budgets.
  • Arid climate total annual precipitation is less
    than potential evapotranspiration.
  • Humid climate total precipitation is more than
    potential evapotranspiration.

24
Stream Discharge
  • Stream discharge is the amount of water passing a
    given point in a stream during a given time.
  • Areas with surplus moisture usually have large
    amounts of runoff into streams.
  • Greater amounts of runoff means greater stream
    discharge.
  • During dry, or deficit, periods when runoff
    diminishes, streams take water from the ground
    water supply this is called base flow.
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