+ All Categories
Home > Technology > Mpg 10e lecture_ch06

Mpg 10e lecture_ch06

Date post: 11-May-2015
Category:
Upload: suny-ulster
View: 252 times
Download: 1 times
Share this document with a friend
Popular Tags:
36
Chapter 6: Atmospheric Moisture McKnight’s Physical Geography : A Landscape Appreciation, Tenth Edition, Hess
Transcript
Page 1: Mpg 10e lecture_ch06

Chapter 6: Atmospheric Moisture

McKnight’s Physical Geography: A Landscape Appreciation,

Tenth Edition, Hess

Page 2: Mpg 10e lecture_ch06

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Atmospheric Moisture

• The Impact of Moisture on the Landscape

• The Hydrologic Cycle

• The Nature of Water: Commonplace but Unique

• Phase Changes of Water

• Water Vapor and Evaporation

• Measures of Humidity

• Condensation

2

Page 3: Mpg 10e lecture_ch06

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Atmospheric Moisture

• Adiabatic Processes

• Clouds

• The Buoyancy of Air

• Precipitation

• Atmospheric Lifting and Precipitation

• Global Distribution of Precipitation

• Acid Rain

3

Page 4: Mpg 10e lecture_ch06

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

The Impact of Moisture on the Landscape

• Formation of fog, haze, clouds, and precipitation

• Short term impacts of precipitation—floods

• Longer term impacts (i.e., caves) on Earth’s surface

4

Page 5: Mpg 10e lecture_ch06

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

The Hydrologic Cycle

5

Figure 6-1

Page 6: Mpg 10e lecture_ch06

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

The Nature of Water: Commonplace but Unique

• Chemistry of water– Atoms and molecules– Two hydrogen and one

oxygen molecule (H2O)

– Covalent bonds– Electrical polarity of

water molecule– Hydrogen bonds

6

Figure 6-2

Page 7: Mpg 10e lecture_ch06

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

The Nature of Water: Commonplace but Unique

• Important properties of water– Exists as a liquid at most points on Earth’s surface– Expands when it freezes; less dense than liquid

water; ice floats in water– Hydrogen bonding creates surface tension, a “skin” of

molecules giving water a stickiness quality– Capillarity– Good solvent– High specific heat

7

Page 8: Mpg 10e lecture_ch06

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Phase Changes of Water

• Water typically exists in three states– Solid: ice– Liquid: liquid water– Gas: water vapor

• Latent heat is required to convert water to its different phases

8

Figure 6-4

Page 9: Mpg 10e lecture_ch06

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Phase Changes of Water

• Phase change processes– Condensation: gas to liquid– Evaporation: liquid to gas– Freezing: liquid to solid– Melting: solid to liquid– Sublimation: solid to gas

and gas to solid

• Latent heat required for each process

• Latent heat as a source of atmospheric energy

9

Figure 6-5

Page 10: Mpg 10e lecture_ch06

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Water Vapor and Evaporation

• Properties of water vapor– Colorless, odorless,

invisible– Air feels sticky

• Evaporation– Warmer temperatures

evaporate more water– Vapor pressure– Windiness reduces

evaporation– Evapotranspiration

10

Figure 6-6

Page 11: Mpg 10e lecture_ch06

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Measures of Humidity

• Humidity—amount of water vapor in the air

• Absolute humidity—mass of vapor for a given volume of air

• Specific humidity—mass of water vapor for a given mass of air

• Vapor pressure—contribution of water vapor to total atmospheric pressure

11

Figure 6-7

Page 12: Mpg 10e lecture_ch06

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Measures of Humidity

• Relative humidity—how close the air is to saturation

• Saturation represents the maximum amount of water vapor the air can hold

• Saturation depends on temperature

• Saturation vapor pressure

12

Figure 6-8

Page 13: Mpg 10e lecture_ch06

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Measures of Humidity

• Relative humidity—example calculation– Assume air at 20°C has 10 g of water vapor per kg of dry air

– To calculate relative humidity, use the curve to get saturation conditions at 20°C (15 g/kg)

– RH = (10g/15g) X 100% = 66.7%

13

Figure 6-8

Saturation specific humidity at temperature of 20°C

Page 14: Mpg 10e lecture_ch06

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Measures of Humidity

• Temperature and relative humidity are inversely related

• Dewpoint temperature

• Sensible temperature

14

Figure 6-9

Page 15: Mpg 10e lecture_ch06

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Condensation

• Conversion of vapor to liquid water

• Surface tension makes it nearly impossible to grow pure water droplets

• Supersaturated air

• Need particle to grow droplet around, a cloud condensation nuclei

• Liquid water can persist at temperatures colder than 0°C without a nuclei—supercooled

15

Figure 6-10

Page 16: Mpg 10e lecture_ch06

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Adiabatic Processes

• Definition of adiabatic process

• Dry adiabatic lapse rate

• Lifting condensation level (LCL)

• Saturated adiabatic lapse rate

• Parcel lapse rates versus environmental lapse rate

16

Figure 6-13

Page 17: Mpg 10e lecture_ch06

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Clouds

• Definition of clouds

• Influence on radiant energy

• Classification (3 primary cloud forms)– Cirrus clouds

17

Figure 6-15a

Page 18: Mpg 10e lecture_ch06

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Clouds

– Stratus clouds

– Cumulus clouds

18

Figure 6-15b

Figure 6-15c

Page 19: Mpg 10e lecture_ch06

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Clouds

• Cloud types– High clouds (over 6 km)

– Middle clouds (from 2 to 6 km)

– Low clouds (less than 2 km)

– Clouds of vertical development• Grow upward from low

bases to heights of over 15 km occasionally

19

Figure 6-16

Page 20: Mpg 10e lecture_ch06

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Fog

20

Figure 6-18

Page 21: Mpg 10e lecture_ch06

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Dew and Frost

• Dew – Usually originates from terrestrial

radiation– Moisture condensation on surfaces that

have been cooled to saturation– Will appear as water droplets

• Frost– Simply a cloud on the ground– Occurs when air temperature lowers to

saturation point, when the saturation point is below 0°C (32°F)

– Will appear as large numbers of small white crystals

21

Figure 6-20

Page 22: Mpg 10e lecture_ch06

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

The Buoyancy of Air

• Definition of buoyancy

• Stable air—parcel is negatively buoyant, will not rise without an external force

• Unstable air—parcel is positively buoyant, will rise without an external force

• Conditional instability

22

Figure 6-21

Page 23: Mpg 10e lecture_ch06

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

The Buoyancy of Air

• Determination of stability via temperature and lapse rate

• Stable

• Unstable

23

Figure 6-23

Figure 6-24

Page 24: Mpg 10e lecture_ch06

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

The Buoyancy of Air

• Conditional instability

• Visual determination of instability

24

Figure 6-26

Figure 6-25

Page 25: Mpg 10e lecture_ch06

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Precipitation

• Originates from clouds

• Condensation insufficient to form raindrops

• Other processes important

• Collision/coalescence—tiny cloud drops collide and merge to form larger drops

25

Figure 6-27

Page 26: Mpg 10e lecture_ch06

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Precipitation

• Ice crystal formation– Bergeron process– Ice crystals and supercooled

droplets coexist in cold clouds

– Ice crystals attract vapor, supercooled drops evaporate to replenish the vapor

– Ice crystals fall as snow or rain

26

Figure 6-28

Page 27: Mpg 10e lecture_ch06

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Precipitation

• Types of precipitation– Rain: liquid water– Snow: cloud ice crystals– Sleet: snow melted and

frozen again before hitting land, ice pellets

– Glaze (Freezing Rain): water falls as liquid, freezes to surfaces

– Hail: strong updrafts are required

27

Figure 6-30

Page 28: Mpg 10e lecture_ch06

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Atmospheric Lifting

• Four types of atmospheric lifting

28

Figure 6-32

Page 29: Mpg 10e lecture_ch06

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Global Distribution of Precipitation

• High precipitation regions, tropics• Low precipitation regions, deserts and poles

29

Figure 6-34

Page 30: Mpg 10e lecture_ch06

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Global Distribution of Precipitation

30

Figure 6-35

Page 31: Mpg 10e lecture_ch06

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Global Distribution of Precipitation

31

Figure 6-37

Page 32: Mpg 10e lecture_ch06

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Acid Rain

• Definition of acid rain• Sources of acid rain• Principal acids—

sulfuric and nitric• Number of hydrogen

ions—pH

32

Figure 6-38

Page 33: Mpg 10e lecture_ch06

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Acid Rain

• Distribution of acid rain in the United States

33

Figure 6-39

Page 34: Mpg 10e lecture_ch06

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Summary

• Moisture can impact the landscape in a variety of ways, including fog, haze, and precipitation

• The hydrologic cycle shows the balance between water removed from the oceans and water returned by precipitation

• Water has a number of unique properties• Water vapor is the gas form of water• Evaporation rates change as surrounding

atmospheric conditions change• There are several measures of vapor content in the

atmosphere34

Page 35: Mpg 10e lecture_ch06

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Summary

• There are several measures of vapor content in the atmosphere, called humidity measurements

• Condensation is the process by which vapor is converted to liquid

• Adiabatic processes explain changes in parcel temperature without the addition or subtraction of heat to the parcel

• Clouds are a visual identification of saturation• Air has buoyancy associated with it that describes

its stability

35

Page 36: Mpg 10e lecture_ch06

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Summary

• Many processes are responsible for precipitation• There are five primary types of precipitation• Atmospheric lifting occurs through four primary

mechanisms• The most highly variable rainfall worldwide occurs

over deserts• Tropical regions are generally wet• Acid rain affects the Northeast and results from

compounds released into the air by humans

36


Recommended