Title: Stability in the Atmosphere
1Stability in the Atmosphere
If an air parcel is displaced from its original
height it can Return to its original height
- Stable Accelerate upward because it is
buoyant - Unstable Stay at the place to which
it was displaced - Neutral
2Lapse Rates
- The Lapse Rate is the rate at which temperature
changes with height in the atmosphere - The environmental lapse rate is the cooling or
warming as measured by a weather balloon. - The parcel lapse rate is the rate at which a
rising air parcel would warm or cool. - This process is assumed to be adiabatic, which
means no heat is added to or taken from the
bounded parcel. -
3Buoyancy
- If an air parcel is less dense than the
surrounding air, it will RISE! - The ideal gas law states that
- PV nRT or ? P/RT
- This means that as temperature increases, density
decreases. - Therefore, since a parcel will rise if it is less
dense than the environment, it follows that it
must also be WARMER than the surrounding
environment - Tenv lt Tparcel gt RISING MOTION
UNSTABLE - Tenv gt Tparcel gt SINKING MOTION STABLE
- Tenv Tparcel gt NEUTRAL
4Moist VS Dry Adiabatic Process
- Adiabatic means NO HEAT EXCHANGE!
- Gd is the dry adiabatic lapse rate (10C km-1)
- Gm is the moist adiabatic lapse rate (6C km-1)
- The moist adiabatic lapse rate is less than the
dry adiabatic lapse rate because as vapor
condenses into water (or water freezes into ice)
for a saturated parcel, latent heat is released
into the parcel, mitigating the adiabatic cooling
--gt
5Absolute Stability
- Gd is the dry adiabatic lapse rate (10C km-1)
- Gm is the moist adiabatic lapse rate (6C km-1)
- Ge is the environmental lapse rate (0C km-1) as
measured by a weather balloon. - Hence, an unsaturated or saturated parcel will
always be cooler than the environment and will
sink back down to the ground - This is an example of absolute stability
- The condition for absolute stability is Gd gt
Gm gt Ge
6Example Inversion Layer
- An inversion layer is a layer in which
temperature increases with height. - This is an example of absolute stability.
- The environmental lapse rate will always be less
than both the dry and moist adiabatic lapse
rates, thus a rising air parcel will always be
colder than the environment, thus negatively
buoyant in an inversion layer! - Inversion layers are key in suppressing
thunderstorm development in the mornings.
7Absolute Instability
- Gd is the dry adiabatic lapse rate (10C km-1)
- Gm is the moist adiabatic lapse rate (6C km-1)
- Ge is the environmental lapse rate (30C km-1) as
measured by a weather balloon. - Hence, both a saturated and an unsaturated parcel
will be WARMER, and thus less DENSE than the
surrounding air. This means the parcel is
ABSOLUTELY unstable and will be positively
buoyant.
8Conditional Instability
- Gd is the dry adiabatic lapse rate (10C km-1)
- Gm is the moist adiabatic lapse rate (6C km-1)
- And for this example, a weather balloon has
measured - Ge is the environmental lapse rate (7.8C km-1)
- If a parcel is saturated, it will follow the pink
line and be WARMER and therefore less dense than
the environment. It will be positively buoyant,
meaning it will RISE. - If a parcel is unsaturated, it will follow the
green line and be COLDER and more dense than the
environment. It will be negatively buoyant. - When Gd gt Ge gt Gm The environment is said to
be conditionally unstable, depending on whether
the parcel is saturated or not!
9Radiosondes
Twice a day at designated reporting stations
around the world upper air balloons are released
carrying an instrument called a radiosonde. The
radiosonde is a very small and light and contains
sensors, which measure temperature, moisture, and
pressure as the balloon rises. At the surface
meteorologists track the speed and heading of the
radiosonde using a dish antenna that locks onto a
radio signal that is emitted from the radiosonde.
Since the balloon drifts with the wind the wind
speed and direction of winds aloft are determined
by tracking the radiosonde. This information is
then transmitted to a ground-based receiver.
10 Environmental Temperature Profile
11Skew-T
Environmental Dew Point Temp Profile
12Isotherms-Blue diagonal lines
13Dry Adiabats- Curving Green Lines
14Moist Adiabats- Curving Blue Lines
15Parcel Path- Solid Black Line
16(No Transcript)
17PARCEL PATH
LCL
T sfc 24 o C 1. Draw a line starting at the
surface temperature, following the DRY ADIABAT Td
sfc 20 o C 2. Draw a line starting at the
surface dewppoint, following the MOIST
ADIABAT 3. Where these two lines cross is
called the LIFTING CONDENSATION LEVEL If air
can be lifted from the surface to this level, a
cloud will form. This will be the level of the
CLOUD BASE. 4. From here the parcel is
saturated, thereforeit will follow the MOIST
ADIABAT
18PARCEL PATH
LFC
inversion
In this case, there is an inversion just above
the surface, in which the environment is warming.
Recalling our discussion of instability, when
the environment warms more quickly than the dry
and moist adiabatic lapse rates, the atmosphere
is said to be ABSOLUTELY STABLE. This means that
an air parcel in this layer will be negatively
buoyant. This is inversion layer is sometimes
called a CAP. It caps the convective ability of
the environment. If an outside force, such as a
frontal passage, daytime heating, or topography,
can lift the air parcel through this level to a
point at which it becomes WARMER than the
environment, it is said to have reached the LEVEL
OF FREE CONVECTION.
19Forcing Air to Rise gt Cloud Development
20Polar Sounding
21Deep Convection
22Moist Capped Boundary Layeraka Loaded Gun
Sounding
CAPE Convective Available Potential
Energy. Defines the vertically integrated
positive buoyancy of a rising parcel. Basically,
it is a measure of the area between the parcel
path and the environmental lapse rate. The
greater the area, the greater the potential for
severe weather.
23Desert Sounding Typical Summer Day in Denver