Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Meteorology - Earth Science
- Pressure
- Barometric Pressure
- mb, in. of mercury
- barometer
- weight of the overlaying atmosphere
pushing down on a unit of area
- isobars
- form circular patterns
showing large masses of air
- Factors that Affect Pressure
- > Temp = farther apart
molecules = < pressure
- >altitude = air < dense, =
< pressure
- MOISTURE: Humidity > = > H20, lighter than
O2/N2, = < pressure
- water vapor enters atmosphere via
evaporation, sublimation, and transpiration
- Factors that Affect Rate of Evaporation
- Temp >, R.O.E. >
- Humidity >, R.O.E. <
- Wind >, R.O.E. >
- Sur. Area >, R.O.E >
- Saturation
- rate of evaporation = rate of condensation
- when air holds as much water
vapor as possible at given temp
- Dew Point
- Temp the air must be cooled to
to reach saturation
- Affected by amount of
WV in air, NOT R.H.
- sling psychrometer
- When air temp + dew point are =, air is
saturated, and condensation occurs
- decreases w/altitude
- As water vapor increases,
dew point temp increases
- Humidity
- As temp >, the amount of
water vapor that can be hold >.
- Absolute Humidity: Amount
(mass) of water vapor in air
- Relative Humdity (RH): Amount of W.V.
in air compared to how much can be held.
- Sling Psychrometer
- dry bulb = air temp
- Wet bulb depends on R.O.E., thus depends on dryness of air
- Pressure systems
- High pressure
- anticyclone
- winds blow clockwise and away from center
- sinking air
- cool, dry weather
- Low Pressure
- cyclone
- winds blow counterclockwise and towards center
- rising air
- As pressure gradient >,
wind speed >
- Clouds
- In order to form:
- moisture in air
- cooling temperature (due to rising air)
- condensation nuclei
(aerosols, dust particles)
- Formation:
- I. warm air rises
- II. Rising air expands
- III. Expanding air cools to
the dew point temp
- IV. At dew point temp, condensation
occurs and clouds form
- Adiabatic Cooling
- Cooling of air due to expansion,
rising air expands and cools
- Forms clouds in low pressure
- Adiabatic Warming
- Warming of air due to compression,
sinking of air compresses and warms
- No clouds form in high
pressure systems
- Air Masses
- Large body of air in troposphere with similar
characteristics of temp, moisture, and press
- Tropical: form @ tropics, high temps
- Polar: form @ high latitudes, low temps
- Arctic = VERY cold
- Continental: form @ land, dry
- Maritime: form @ water, wet
- Source Region =
where air mass forms
- take on characteristics of
surfaces over which they form
- Fronts
- Cold
- cold air mass moves into
region of warm air
- Cold air = dense, stays near surface
- forces less dense warm air to rise above it
- Thus, clouds form at leading edge
- Precip occurs along frontal boundary at surface
- narrow band of heavy rain/thunderstorms
- Warm
- warm air mass moves into
region of cold air
- warm, less dense air is forced to rise over the top
- Precip occurs before frontal boundary at surface
- Wide band of steady, all day shower
- Stationary
- 2 different air masses not
moving relative to one another
- steady, heavy rain
- precip occurs in a wide band
along the front at the surface
- Occluded
- cold air mass moves into and
takes over a region of warm air
- steady, all day rains followed
by heavy rain/thunderstorms
- precip occurs in a wide band
before and along the front
- Always associated with low pressure systems
- counterclockwise circulation of air in L press
draw warm, moist air up from lower latitude
and colder, dry air down from high latitudes
- Rain
- occurs when air rises, expands, cools
adiabatically to dew point temp,
condenses to form clouds, ff droplets
get heavy enough to fall
- Areas of Rain
- Windward Wide of
Mountain/Orographic Effect
- Windward side is cool, wet
- air rises as it is forced
over mountain
- Leeward side is cool and dry
- Rain shadow - very dry region on leeward
side of mountain due to sinking air
- Equatorial Regions
- Warm air rises due to convection
- Recieve most direct insolation,
so air is heated and rises
- Low Pressure Systems
- Surface air converges and rises at center of L. press systems
- Fronts
- Warm, less dense air rises over
colder, more dense air
- Areas with little rain
- where air is sinking, compresses, warms (adiabatically)
- Storms
- Thunderstorms
- Form from uplifting warm air associated with cold front
- located in inland regions
- produce heavy rains, hail, winds, thunder/lighting
- Tornadoes
- rapidly rotating low press. funnel associated with
strong thunderstorms and cold fronts in spring
- Very narrow: 100 ft - 1 mile in dm
- Last for few minutes to an hour
- Hurricanes
- Form as low pressure centers
over warm tropical waters in
late summer/early fall
- gain energy from condensation of moisture
evaporated over warm ocean water
- Warm rising air produces a very
strong low pressure system
- Lose strength as they move over land
- Flooding along coast - storm surge-causes most damage
- Minimum winds = 74 mph
- Lake Effect Snow
- prevailing winds move across the rel. warm Great Lakes, pick up
moisture, which is uplifted over Tug Hill, where it snows dues to
orographic effect
- Storm Tracks
- Prevailing Westerlies - winds over US
- blow W -> East
- Tropical storms that affect US develop West of Africa
- trade winds carry them to US South east