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I. Evaporation & Humidity A. Water’s changing states: 1. Solid liquid = melting 2. Liquid gas =...

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Page 1: I. Evaporation & Humidity A. Water’s changing states: 1. Solid  liquid = melting 2. Liquid  gas = evaporation 3. Gas  liquid = condensation.
Page 2: I. Evaporation & Humidity A. Water’s changing states: 1. Solid  liquid = melting 2. Liquid  gas = evaporation 3. Gas  liquid = condensation.

I. Evaporation & HumidityA. Water’s changing states:

1. Solid liquid = melting2. Liquid gas = evaporation3. Gas liquid = condensation

Page 3: I. Evaporation & Humidity A. Water’s changing states: 1. Solid  liquid = melting 2. Liquid  gas = evaporation 3. Gas  liquid = condensation.

B.Evaporation:1. Heat is absorbed from the environment in

this process, so it is a cooling process.

Page 4: I. Evaporation & Humidity A. Water’s changing states: 1. Solid  liquid = melting 2. Liquid  gas = evaporation 3. Gas  liquid = condensation.

Phases of Matter

Page 5: I. Evaporation & Humidity A. Water’s changing states: 1. Solid  liquid = melting 2. Liquid  gas = evaporation 3. Gas  liquid = condensation.

C. Relative Humidity - compares the amount of water in the air with the maximum amount it can hold at that temperature.

Rel. Humidity = mass of water in air X 100 mass of water air can hold

Page 6: I. Evaporation & Humidity A. Water’s changing states: 1. Solid  liquid = melting 2. Liquid  gas = evaporation 3. Gas  liquid = condensation.
Page 7: I. Evaporation & Humidity A. Water’s changing states: 1. Solid  liquid = melting 2. Liquid  gas = evaporation 3. Gas  liquid = condensation.

1. Measured with a psychrometer - basically 2 thermometers together, where 1 has a wet cotton sleeve over its bulb.

Page 8: I. Evaporation & Humidity A. Water’s changing states: 1. Solid  liquid = melting 2. Liquid  gas = evaporation 3. Gas  liquid = condensation.

2. You make two measurements… the dry bulb temp. & the wet bulb temp.

Page 9: I. Evaporation & Humidity A. Water’s changing states: 1. Solid  liquid = melting 2. Liquid  gas = evaporation 3. Gas  liquid = condensation.

3. Use those values in your Reference Tables to find the relative humidity.

Page 10: I. Evaporation & Humidity A. Water’s changing states: 1. Solid  liquid = melting 2. Liquid  gas = evaporation 3. Gas  liquid = condensation.

What is the relative humidity if the dry bulb temp is 12 C and the wet bulb temp is 8 C

Page 11: I. Evaporation & Humidity A. Water’s changing states: 1. Solid  liquid = melting 2. Liquid  gas = evaporation 3. Gas  liquid = condensation.

What is the relative humidity if the dry bulb temp. is 26 C and the wet

bulb is 24 C?

Page 12: I. Evaporation & Humidity A. Water’s changing states: 1. Solid  liquid = melting 2. Liquid  gas = evaporation 3. Gas  liquid = condensation.

What is the relative humidity if the dry bulb temp. is 20 C and the wet

bulb is 11 C?

Page 13: I. Evaporation & Humidity A. Water’s changing states: 1. Solid  liquid = melting 2. Liquid  gas = evaporation 3. Gas  liquid = condensation.

If the dry bulb temperature is 14 C and the relative humidity is 79%, what is the wet bulb temperature?

Page 14: I. Evaporation & Humidity A. Water’s changing states: 1. Solid  liquid = melting 2. Liquid  gas = evaporation 3. Gas  liquid = condensation.

II. Forms of CondensationA. When the air temperature drops so

that it can no longer hold the amount of water vapor it contains, the water condenses on objects outdoors. This is called dew.

Page 15: I. Evaporation & Humidity A. Water’s changing states: 1. Solid  liquid = melting 2. Liquid  gas = evaporation 3. Gas  liquid = condensation.

B. The temperature at which this will occur is called the dew point.

1. Measured just like humidity with a psychrometer.

2. A separate Reference Table lets us calculate this value.

Page 16: I. Evaporation & Humidity A. Water’s changing states: 1. Solid  liquid = melting 2. Liquid  gas = evaporation 3. Gas  liquid = condensation.

C. Requirements for condensation: (cooling air!)

Ways air can be cooled:1. A cold surface2. radiated heat3. Mixing with colder air4. Expanding as it rises

Page 17: I. Evaporation & Humidity A. Water’s changing states: 1. Solid  liquid = melting 2. Liquid  gas = evaporation 3. Gas  liquid = condensation.

a. You must have something for the water to condense upon! These little particles in the atmosphere are called condensation nuclei.

Page 18: I. Evaporation & Humidity A. Water’s changing states: 1. Solid  liquid = melting 2. Liquid  gas = evaporation 3. Gas  liquid = condensation.

D. When condensation freezes, it forms frost.E. Condensation can be visible in the air as

fog.1. Radiation fogs - ground cools rapidly at

night, forming a cool layer of air near the ground.2. Advection fogs - warm, moist southerly

winds blow over snow-covered ground, forming fog.

Page 19: I. Evaporation & Humidity A. Water’s changing states: 1. Solid  liquid = melting 2. Liquid  gas = evaporation 3. Gas  liquid = condensation.
Page 20: I. Evaporation & Humidity A. Water’s changing states: 1. Solid  liquid = melting 2. Liquid  gas = evaporation 3. Gas  liquid = condensation.

What is the dewpoint temp. if the dry bulb temp is 22 C and the wet bulb temp is 20 C?

Page 21: I. Evaporation & Humidity A. Water’s changing states: 1. Solid  liquid = melting 2. Liquid  gas = evaporation 3. Gas  liquid = condensation.

If the dry bulb temperature is 0 C and the dewpoint temp is -9 C, what is the

wet bulb temp?

Page 22: I. Evaporation & Humidity A. Water’s changing states: 1. Solid  liquid = melting 2. Liquid  gas = evaporation 3. Gas  liquid = condensation.

III. CloudsA. Clouds are simply fogs high up in the air!1. Clouds that form in flat sheets are stratiform clouds.2. Vertical clouds are cumuliform clouds.

Page 23: I. Evaporation & Humidity A. Water’s changing states: 1. Solid  liquid = melting 2. Liquid  gas = evaporation 3. Gas  liquid = condensation.

B. Some of the water in a cloud can be below 0 C and still exist as a

liquid. This is supercooled water.

http://www.howstuffworks.com/cloud.htm

Page 24: I. Evaporation & Humidity A. Water’s changing states: 1. Solid  liquid = melting 2. Liquid  gas = evaporation 3. Gas  liquid = condensation.

C. Types of clouds: (Check out chart on p. 507!)

1. Cirrus - thin, feathery, high clouds made of ice crystals

Page 25: I. Evaporation & Humidity A. Water’s changing states: 1. Solid  liquid = melting 2. Liquid  gas = evaporation 3. Gas  liquid = condensation.

2. Stratus - low sheets or layers of clouds

Page 26: I. Evaporation & Humidity A. Water’s changing states: 1. Solid  liquid = melting 2. Liquid  gas = evaporation 3. Gas  liquid = condensation.

3. Cumulus - puffy, cotton ball-like clouds; form from rising air.

“Fair weather clouds”

Page 27: I. Evaporation & Humidity A. Water’s changing states: 1. Solid  liquid = melting 2. Liquid  gas = evaporation 3. Gas  liquid = condensation.

4. Cirrostratus - High, thin sheets of ice clouds

Page 28: I. Evaporation & Humidity A. Water’s changing states: 1. Solid  liquid = melting 2. Liquid  gas = evaporation 3. Gas  liquid = condensation.

5. Stratocumulus - layers of round puffs

Page 29: I. Evaporation & Humidity A. Water’s changing states: 1. Solid  liquid = melting 2. Liquid  gas = evaporation 3. Gas  liquid = condensation.

6. Cirrocumulus - High, puffy clouds

Page 30: I. Evaporation & Humidity A. Water’s changing states: 1. Solid  liquid = melting 2. Liquid  gas = evaporation 3. Gas  liquid = condensation.

7. Altocumulus - Higher stratocumulus clouds

Page 31: I. Evaporation & Humidity A. Water’s changing states: 1. Solid  liquid = melting 2. Liquid  gas = evaporation 3. Gas  liquid = condensation.

8. Nimbostratus - High sheets of gray clouds that make steady rains.

Page 32: I. Evaporation & Humidity A. Water’s changing states: 1. Solid  liquid = melting 2. Liquid  gas = evaporation 3. Gas  liquid = condensation.

D. When a large mass of warm, moist air rises quickly, immense cumulonimbus clouds

develop. These clouds are the basis for severe weather such as thunderstorms and tornadoes.

Page 33: I. Evaporation & Humidity A. Water’s changing states: 1. Solid  liquid = melting 2. Liquid  gas = evaporation 3. Gas  liquid = condensation.

IV. PrecipitationA. How raindrops form:1. Clouds are made up of countless microscopic water droplets2. As air inside the cloud moves around, these droplets collide

Page 34: I. Evaporation & Humidity A. Water’s changing states: 1. Solid  liquid = melting 2. Liquid  gas = evaporation 3. Gas  liquid = condensation.

3. Some stick together and get larger4. When about 1,000,000 clouds

droplets stick together, a rain drop forms and falls from the cloud.

Page 35: I. Evaporation & Humidity A. Water’s changing states: 1. Solid  liquid = melting 2. Liquid  gas = evaporation 3. Gas  liquid = condensation.

B.Forms of precipitation:

1. Drizzle - fine droplets that fall slowly

2. Rain - large droplets up to .25 cm diameter

Page 36: I. Evaporation & Humidity A. Water’s changing states: 1. Solid  liquid = melting 2. Liquid  gas = evaporation 3. Gas  liquid = condensation.

3. Snow - 6-sided crystals of ice4. Sleet - rain drops that freeze as they fall

through a layer of very cold air.

Page 37: I. Evaporation & Humidity A. Water’s changing states: 1. Solid  liquid = melting 2. Liquid  gas = evaporation 3. Gas  liquid = condensation.

5. Hail - A many-layered ice crystal that forms in enormous convection currents within a cumulonimbus cloud.

Page 38: I. Evaporation & Humidity A. Water’s changing states: 1. Solid  liquid = melting 2. Liquid  gas = evaporation 3. Gas  liquid = condensation.
Page 39: I. Evaporation & Humidity A. Water’s changing states: 1. Solid  liquid = melting 2. Liquid  gas = evaporation 3. Gas  liquid = condensation.

C. Where does it rain?1. Windward sides of mountain ranges. The leeward (downwind) side is usually very dry with deserts.

Page 40: I. Evaporation & Humidity A. Water’s changing states: 1. Solid  liquid = melting 2. Liquid  gas = evaporation 3. Gas  liquid = condensation.
Page 41: I. Evaporation & Humidity A. Water’s changing states: 1. Solid  liquid = melting 2. Liquid  gas = evaporation 3. Gas  liquid = condensation.

Seattle

Page 42: I. Evaporation & Humidity A. Water’s changing states: 1. Solid  liquid = melting 2. Liquid  gas = evaporation 3. Gas  liquid = condensation.

2. Storm areas (hurricanes, fronts, low-pressure areas, etc.)

3. Areas where global winds converge (see Reference Tables)

Page 43: I. Evaporation & Humidity A. Water’s changing states: 1. Solid  liquid = melting 2. Liquid  gas = evaporation 3. Gas  liquid = condensation.

D. Acid Rain - pollutants dissolve in rainwater to make it acidic.

- Affects wildlife, plants, humans, automobiles, etc.


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