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Chapter 4 Atmospheric Circulation. Earth Regions near the equator receive light at 90 o High...

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Chapter 4 Atmospheric Circulation
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Page 1: Chapter 4 Atmospheric Circulation. Earth Regions near the equator receive light at 90 o High latitudes receive light at low angles.

Chapter 4

Atmospheric Circulation

Page 2: Chapter 4 Atmospheric Circulation. Earth Regions near the equator receive light at 90 o High latitudes receive light at low angles.

Earth

Regions near the equator receive light at 90o

High latitudes receive light at low angles

Page 3: Chapter 4 Atmospheric Circulation. Earth Regions near the equator receive light at 90 o High latitudes receive light at low angles.

Earth

Regions near the equator receive light at 90o

High latitudes receive light at low angles

Light energy is more concentrated near the equator. In other words, there is a greater flux per unit area (W/m2)

Page 4: Chapter 4 Atmospheric Circulation. Earth Regions near the equator receive light at 90 o High latitudes receive light at low angles.

Solar energy is concentrated near the equator

Image: Netherlands Center for Climate Research

Page 5: Chapter 4 Atmospheric Circulation. Earth Regions near the equator receive light at 90 o High latitudes receive light at low angles.

Ene

rgy

90 45 0 45 90Latitude

absorbed solar energy

Page 6: Chapter 4 Atmospheric Circulation. Earth Regions near the equator receive light at 90 o High latitudes receive light at low angles.

Ene

rgy

90 45 0 45 90Latitude

absorbed solar energy

Emitted IR energy

Page 7: Chapter 4 Atmospheric Circulation. Earth Regions near the equator receive light at 90 o High latitudes receive light at low angles.

Ene

rgy

90 45 0 45 90Latitude

absorbed solar energy

Emitted IR energy

More energy is absorbed near the equator than emittedAnd more energy is emitted near the poles than is absorbed.

Page 8: Chapter 4 Atmospheric Circulation. Earth Regions near the equator receive light at 90 o High latitudes receive light at low angles.

Ene

rgy

90 45 0 45 90Latitude

net radiation surplus

Page 9: Chapter 4 Atmospheric Circulation. Earth Regions near the equator receive light at 90 o High latitudes receive light at low angles.

Ene

rgy

90 45 0 45 90Latitude

net radiation surplus

net radiationdeficit

Excess energy at the equator is transferred towards the poles by convection cells

Page 10: Chapter 4 Atmospheric Circulation. Earth Regions near the equator receive light at 90 o High latitudes receive light at low angles.

Solar energy received is greatest near the equator.

Energy is moved from the equator to the poles.

Page 11: Chapter 4 Atmospheric Circulation. Earth Regions near the equator receive light at 90 o High latitudes receive light at low angles.

Solar energy received is greatest near the equator.

Energy is moved from the equator to the poles.

Energy is transferred by wind and ocean currents

Page 12: Chapter 4 Atmospheric Circulation. Earth Regions near the equator receive light at 90 o High latitudes receive light at low angles.

Air near the equator is warmed, and risesso

lar

rad

iatio

n

Page 13: Chapter 4 Atmospheric Circulation. Earth Regions near the equator receive light at 90 o High latitudes receive light at low angles.

The rising air creates a circulation cell, called a Hadley Cell

sola

r ra

dia

tion

L

H

HRising air low pressureSinking air high pressure

Page 14: Chapter 4 Atmospheric Circulation. Earth Regions near the equator receive light at 90 o High latitudes receive light at low angles.

Warm air rises

Rising air is replaced

Hadley Circulation Cell

Page 15: Chapter 4 Atmospheric Circulation. Earth Regions near the equator receive light at 90 o High latitudes receive light at low angles.

Warm air rises

Air cools, sinks

Rising air is replaced

Hadley Circulation Cell

Page 16: Chapter 4 Atmospheric Circulation. Earth Regions near the equator receive light at 90 o High latitudes receive light at low angles.

Warm air rises

Air cools, sinks

Rising air is replaced

Hadley Circulation Cell

LOW HIGH HIGH

Page 17: Chapter 4 Atmospheric Circulation. Earth Regions near the equator receive light at 90 o High latitudes receive light at low angles.

The Earth would have two large Hadley cells, if it did not rotate.

--This is exactly what we think occurs on Venus (which rotates very slowly)!

Rotation of the Earth leads to the Coriolis Effect

This causes winds (and all moving objects) to be deflected:

to the right in the Northern Hemisphereto the left in the Southern Hemisphere

Page 18: Chapter 4 Atmospheric Circulation. Earth Regions near the equator receive light at 90 o High latitudes receive light at low angles.

The Coriolis Effect

Based on conservation of angular momentum

We experience linear momentum when we are in a car that is traveling fast and then stops suddenly.

Page 19: Chapter 4 Atmospheric Circulation. Earth Regions near the equator receive light at 90 o High latitudes receive light at low angles.

Planet Earth rotates once per day.

Objects near the poles travel slower than those near the equator.

Page 20: Chapter 4 Atmospheric Circulation. Earth Regions near the equator receive light at 90 o High latitudes receive light at low angles.

Angular Momentum

L = mvr

r m

v

Angular momentum is conserved unless someforce (a torque) is applied

Page 21: Chapter 4 Atmospheric Circulation. Earth Regions near the equator receive light at 90 o High latitudes receive light at low angles.

Objects near the poles have less angular momentum than those near the equator.

When objects move poleward, their angular momentum causes them to go faster than the surrounding air. Conversely, they slow as they move towards the equator.

Page 22: Chapter 4 Atmospheric Circulation. Earth Regions near the equator receive light at 90 o High latitudes receive light at low angles.

When objects move north or south, their angular momentum causes them to appear to go slower or faster.

This is why traveling objects (or air parcels) deflect to the right in the northern hemisphere and to the left in the southern hemisphere.

Page 23: Chapter 4 Atmospheric Circulation. Earth Regions near the equator receive light at 90 o High latitudes receive light at low angles.

Example of Coriolis effect: hurricanes

L

• Hurricanes are low pressure centers• Air moves from high pressure towards low pressure

HH

isobar (line of constantpressure)

Page 24: Chapter 4 Atmospheric Circulation. Earth Regions near the equator receive light at 90 o High latitudes receive light at low angles.

Hurricanes: Northern hemisphere

L

• As the air moves in, it is deflected towards the right in the NH• Resulting circulation is counter-clockwise

HH

Page 25: Chapter 4 Atmospheric Circulation. Earth Regions near the equator receive light at 90 o High latitudes receive light at low angles.

The Coriolis effect causes winds to deflect as they travel within circulation cells

This breaks up the two large Hadley cells into six smaller cells.

Page 26: Chapter 4 Atmospheric Circulation. Earth Regions near the equator receive light at 90 o High latitudes receive light at low angles.

In the tropics, surface air is moving equatorward. It isdeflected to the right in the NH (left in the SH), givingrise to easterly flow (the trade winds)

Easterlies

Page 27: Chapter 4 Atmospheric Circulation. Earth Regions near the equator receive light at 90 o High latitudes receive light at low angles.

At midlatitudes, surface air is moving poleward. It isdeflected to the right in the NH (left in the SH), givingrise to westerly flow (the prevailing westerlies)

Westerlies

Westerlies

Page 28: Chapter 4 Atmospheric Circulation. Earth Regions near the equator receive light at 90 o High latitudes receive light at low angles.

                           

                                

Credit: NASA

Credit: NASA

Page 29: Chapter 4 Atmospheric Circulation. Earth Regions near the equator receive light at 90 o High latitudes receive light at low angles.

Warm air rises

Air cools, sinks

Rising air is replaced

Hadley Circulation Cell

LOW HIGH HIGH

Page 30: Chapter 4 Atmospheric Circulation. Earth Regions near the equator receive light at 90 o High latitudes receive light at low angles.

Warm air rises

Air cools, sinks

Rising air is replaced

LOW HIGH HIGH

Rising air cools; the air’s capacity to hold water drops. Rain!

No rain inregionswhereair isdescending

Page 31: Chapter 4 Atmospheric Circulation. Earth Regions near the equator receive light at 90 o High latitudes receive light at low angles.

: orbit-net.nesdis.noaa.gov/arad/ gpcp/maps/frontmap.gif

Page 32: Chapter 4 Atmospheric Circulation. Earth Regions near the equator receive light at 90 o High latitudes receive light at low angles.

Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ)

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:IntertropicalConvergenceZone-EO.jpg

Page 33: Chapter 4 Atmospheric Circulation. Earth Regions near the equator receive light at 90 o High latitudes receive light at low angles.
Page 34: Chapter 4 Atmospheric Circulation. Earth Regions near the equator receive light at 90 o High latitudes receive light at low angles.

Caution:

Zonal weather pattern is not completely true

The pattern is disrupted by land-sea contrasts

Page 35: Chapter 4 Atmospheric Circulation. Earth Regions near the equator receive light at 90 o High latitudes receive light at low angles.

Land heats and cools rapidly

Water heats and cools slowly

Page 36: Chapter 4 Atmospheric Circulation. Earth Regions near the equator receive light at 90 o High latitudes receive light at low angles.

Warm air rises

Onshore wind

DAY

Sea Breezes

Page 37: Chapter 4 Atmospheric Circulation. Earth Regions near the equator receive light at 90 o High latitudes receive light at low angles.

Sea Breezes

Warm air rises

Onshore wind

DAY

Offshore wind

NIGHT

Page 38: Chapter 4 Atmospheric Circulation. Earth Regions near the equator receive light at 90 o High latitudes receive light at low angles.

Tibetian Plateau--Monsoon Circulation


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