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Meteorology Lecture 1

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Meteorology Lecture 1. Weather and Climate Review. What drives our weather?. The sun Insolation – solar energy reaching the Earth Remember the sun’s output can vary, which impacts weather on Earth e.g. The Little Ice Age. Folklore : Sirius – The Dog Star. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Meteorology Lecture 1 Weather and Climate Review
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Page 1: Meteorology Lecture 1

Meteorology Lecture 1

Weather and Climate Review

Page 2: Meteorology Lecture 1

What drives our weather?

• The sun

• Insolation – solar energy reaching the Earth

• Remember the sun’s output can vary, which impacts weather on Earth– e.g. The Little Ice Age

Page 3: Meteorology Lecture 1

Folklore: Sirius – The Dog Star

• Thought to produce heat at the end of summer

• Worshipped by numerous civilizations

• The “Dog Days of Summer”

Sirius

Sun

Page 4: Meteorology Lecture 1

What about the Moon?

• Does it warm the Earth?

• Why does it glow?Albedo – % of insolation an object reflects

High – light surfacesLow – dark surfaces

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Solar Radiation and Earth’s Surface

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Why do we have seasons?

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Sun conditions at the Solstices and Equinoxes

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Solar declination: latitudinal change ofatitudinal change of subsolar pointssubsolar points

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Energy Pathways

Figure 4.1

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Heat Transfer

• Heat – energy produced by the motion of molecules and atoms in a substance

• 4 ways to transfer heat:

1. Radiation – electromagnetic waves (sunlight)

2. Conduction – energy moved from high to low

3. Convection – vertical movement of energy

4. Advection – horizontal movement of energy

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Earth’s Modern Atmosphere

• The atmosphere is absolutely essential for life on Earth

• Earth’s atmosphere exists in a series of spheres or layers that grade into one another  

• Layers: Composition, temperature, and function  

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Protective Atmosphere

Figure 3.6

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Energy Balance in the Troposphere  • Greenhouse Effect – where gases

(carbon dioxide, water vapor, methane, nitrous oxide, and CFCs) absorb insolation and reradiate it back to Earth in longer wavelengths thereby warming the lower troposphere

• The Greenhouse Effect and Atmospheric Warming– Atmosphere absorbs heat energy– Atmosphere delays transfer of heat from

Earth into space

Page 16: Meteorology Lecture 1

Local Factors Influencing Air Temperature

• Urban Effect– Urban Heat Island

• Darker surfaces – less reflection• Less forest cover• Less water on surface• Heat from human energy use

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The Urban Environment

Figure 4.21

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Urban Heat Island

Figure 4.22

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Global NET R

• Surfaces lose heat in one of 3 ways:– Latent heat of evaporation – energy released

as water changes state; can’t feel it– Sensible heat – heat you can feel and

measure; convection and conduction– Ground heating and cooling – energy stored

during warm periods and released during cool periods

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Radiation Budgets

Figure 4.20

El Mirage, CA

Pitt Meadows,BC

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Principal Temperature Controls

• Latitude

• Altitude

• Cloud Cover

• Land-Water Heating Differences

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Latitude and Temperature

Figure 5.4

• Latitude  – Affects insolation– Sun angles– Daylength

Page 23: Meteorology Lecture 1

Altitude

Figure 5.5

• Altitude  – High altitude has greater daily range– High altitude has lower annual average

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Cloud Cover

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Land–Water Heating Differences 

• Evaporation (= latent heat)

• Transparency (= penetration of insolation)

• Specific heat (differs among objects)

• Movement (= vertical mixing)

• Ocean currents and sea surface temperatures(= spread of energy spatially)

All this leads to this important concept:Marine vs. continental effects

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Land–Water Heating Differences  

Figure 5.7

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Global Temperature Ranges

Figure 5.17

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Atmospheric Pressure Systems

High-pressure system-also called anticyclone-circulating body of air-descending air-clockwise circulation innorthern hemisphere

Low-pressure system-also called cyclone-circulating body of air-rising air-counterclockwise circ. in northern hemisphere

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Atmospheric Pressure Map

Isobars – lines of equal air pressure on a map

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Wind DirectionWinds are named according to the direction FROM which they are blowing

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Direction of Air Flow• Unequal heating of land surfaces

• Pressure gradient force – air flows from high to low

• Coriolis force – deflection or change in direction caused by Earth’s rotation

• Frictional forces – places a drag on that air flow

Page 32: Meteorology Lecture 1

Pressure Gradient Force

Fluctuations in the Pressure Gradient

High pressure to low pressure, perpendicular to isobars

Page 33: Meteorology Lecture 1

Coriolis Force•Due to Earth’s rotation

•Pulls wind to right in northern hemisphere

•Pulls wind to left in southern hemisphere

•Strongest at poles

•None at equatorCoriolis Force

Page 34: Meteorology Lecture 1

Frictional Forces

• Near surface, friction (f) works against pressure gradient force (pgf), so resulting wind direction is between pressure gradient force and coriolis force (cf)

pgf

f

cf – northern hemisphere

WIND

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Three Forces Combined

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Rossby Waves

Figure 6.17

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Strong boundaries often

occur between warm and cold

air. In the mid-latitudes, the

polar front marks this thermal

discontinuity at the surface.

The Polar Front and Jet Streams

Page 38: Meteorology Lecture 1

Relative Humidity• Relative humidity is the indication of how

close the air is to saturation and when condensation will begin

• Dew-point temperature not really a temperature, but a measure of moisture content

• When air temperature tries to decrease below the dew point, surplus water vapor is removed from the air by condensation

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Relative Humidity

Figure 7.8

Cooling

Warming

Actualwater vapor

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Hydrologic Cycle


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