Title: The Atmosphere in Motion
1The Atmosphere in Motion
2Air Pressure Wind section 1
- Wind
- Horizontal movement of air
- Helps moderate surface temperatures
- Distributes moisture
- cleanses the atmosphere
- Several forces affect direction of movement
- Caused by differences in air pressure
3What is Air Pressure?
- Weight of the air pushing down on Earths surface
- At sea level 14.7 pounds per square inch (psi)
- At sea level, the barometric pressure is 29.92
inches or 1013.2 millibars (mb). - As increase elevation, pressure decreases b/c
less air above - Decreases 50 every 5 km
- Exerted in all directions
4Air Pressure With Altitude
5MercuryBarometer
- Weight of column of mercury is balanced by the
pressure exerted on the dish of mercury from air
above
6Aneroid Barometer Barograph
- Without liquid
- Partially evacuated metal chamber that compresses
or expands based on outside pressure
7Recording Air Pressure
- Different units can be used to express air
pressure - With a mercury barometer
- Inches
- Millimeters
- Meteorologists use
- millibars
8You can easily change from inches to millibars
29.92 inches
9Why Does Air Pressure Change?
- Elevation
- As altitude increases, pressure decreases
- Temperature
- As temperature increases, pressure decreases
- Molecules move further apart as air is heated
- So fewer air molecules than in same volume of
cool air - Warm air ? lower pressure, cold air ? high
pressure - Humidity
- As humidity increases,
- pressure decreases
- Water molecules have
- less mass than oxygen
- or nitrogen molecules
10Why Does Air Pressure Change?
- Changes in air pressure can aid in predicting the
weather - A decrease in pressure often indicates
approaching warmer, more humid, air along w/ rain
or snow - Less dense air ? less pressure exerted
- An increase in pressure often indicates
approaching cooler, drier air fair weather - More dense air ? more pressure exerted
11Why Does Air Pressure Change?
- Meteorologists analyze air pressure by plotting
isobars on weather maps - Isobar line that joins points of equal
barometric (air) pressure - A closed isobar forms a loop on a weather map
- High-pressure area (high)
- Air pressure steadily increases toward the center
of a set of closed isobars - Think of a hill
- Low-pressure area (low)
- Air pressure steadily decreases toward the center
of a set of closed isobars - Think of a valley
12Isobars
13Pressure Gradient
- Pressure Gradient change in pressure
- change in distance
- The closer the isobars, the steeper the gradient
- Pressure changes quickly
- Faster, stronger winds
- The further the isobars, the more gentle the
slope - Pressure changes slowly
- Slower, weaker winds
14Differences in pressure caused by unequal heating
of Earths surface -Winds blow from areas of
High to Low pressure
What Makes the Wind Blow?
H L
WIND
Falling air Rising air (cold, dry
more dense) (warm, moist less
dense) Fair weather stormy weather High
Pressure Low Pressure
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16Measuring Surface Wind Direction Speed
- Wind vanes ? instrument to determine the
direction of wind - Broad tail
- Resists wind
- Points away from where the wind is blowing from
- Arrowhead
- Points into the wind (where the wind is blowing
from) - Winds are named for the direction from which they
blow from - Examples
- Blow from west (to east) westerly (or west)
wind - Noreaster winds from the northeast
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18Measuring Surface Wind Direction Speed
- Anemometer ? instrument used to measure wind
speeds 10 meters above ground - Effects on water, smoke, trees, other objects
can also be used as estimates of wind speed.
19Factors Affecting Winds section 2
- The Coriolis Effect the tendency of an object
(wind, ocean current, plane, etc.) moving freely
over the earths surface to curve away from its
path of travel - Due to Earths rotation
- Northern Hemisphere ? deflect to right (from
perspective of object) - Blow clockwise out of areas of high pressure
- Blow counterclockwise into areas of low pressure
- Diagrams
- Southern Hemisphere ? deflect to left (from
perspective of object) - Does not depend on objects direction of movement
- Only noticeable on large scale (winds, planes,
ocean currents) - Greatest near poles, least near equator
- Increases if speed of object increases
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21Coriolis Effect Animation
Coriolis Effect Wind Direction Visualiziation
22Friction
- Friction between the air ground slows winds
- Changes the impact of the Coriolis effect on
surface winds - More friction ? less deflection/curving
- Ex. rough land
- Less friction ? more deflection/curving
- Ex. smooth land or water
- Winds at higher altitudes ? less friction ?
stronger Coriolis effect
23Friction
Jet Stream Video
Internet Investigation How Does the Jet Stream
Change Through the Year?
- Jet stream Band of very fast winds (120-240
km/hr) near the top of the troposphere (hardly
affected by friction) - Typically 1000s of km long, 100s of km wide,
about 1 km from top to bottom - Polar-front jet stream cool polar air joins w/
warmer air to the south - Generally flows west to east
- Great effect on weather in the U. S.
- Energy for storms, directs storms paths
- Can reach to central FL in winter, generally over
Canada and northern U.S. in summer - Speed depends on pressure gradient in upper
troposphere (depends on surface temps) - Fastest in winter
- Tropical-easterly jet stream warm air in tropics
of N. Hemisphere - Weaker than polar-front jet stream
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25Global Wind Patterns sec 3
- Affected by
- Unequal heating of Earth by sunlight (temp
diff btw equator poles) - Earth's rotation (spin) ( Coriolis effect)
- Location of continents
- Time of year
- Local topography (landforms)
26Global Wind Patterns
- What would happen if Earth did not rotate there
was no Coriolis effect? - The unequal heating
- makes the tropical equatorial regions warmer than
the polar regions. - lower pressure at the (warmer) equator
- Air rises moves toward poles
- higher pressure at the (cold) poles
- Polar air moves toward equator
- heats, rises, continues cycle
- Would result in one large circulation cell in
each hemisphere
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28Effects of Earths Rotation
- B/c Earth rotates
- Coriolis effect prevents air from flowing
straight from equator to poles - Air flowing northward from equator is deflected
to right - Air flowing southward from equator is deflected
to left - Air cools sinks long before reaches polar
regions - Air circulation is better represented w/ 3-cells
in each hemisphere - Idealized, not 100 accurate, but helpful in
understanding global wind patterns
29Effects of Earths Rotation
- Three-Celled Circulation Model
- 3 circulation cells in each hemisphere
- 0 (equator)-30
- 30-60
- 60-90 (pole)
- Direction of circulation changes from each cell
to the next - Caused by alternating bands of high low
pressure at Earths surface - Polar front boundary at 60 where air flows
away from high pressure poles collides w/
warmer air moving up from lower latitudes - As winds blow from high to low pressure, they are
deflected by the Coriolis effect - To right in northern hemisphere
- To left in southern hemisphere
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31Weaknesses of the Three-Celled Model
- 3 main weaknesses
- Gives a simplified view of circulation btw 30
60 - Referred to as middle latitudes or mid-latitudes
- Most of the U. S.
- Surfaces winds determined by locations of
transient high- low-pressure systems - Change often
- Does not take into account the effects of the
continents (heat cool more rapidly than oceans)
or seasons - Based on a simplified view of upper-level winds
- Impression that generally travel N ? S
- Primarily westerly (except near equator, Coriolis
is weak)
32Strength of the Three-Celled Model
- Fairly accurate image of general surface winds
pressures outside the mid-latitudes - Gives a picture of wind patterns pressure
systems that is useful for climate studies - b/c involves averaging patterns over long periods
33Description of Wind Pressure Belts
- Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) or
doldrums a low pressure belt at the equator
where winds from both hemispheres come together - Little to no wind, hot humid, rain is common
- Tradewinds blow from the NE (N. Hemi) SE (S.
Hemi) are found at about 30º N S - Polar highs high-pressure regions where cold air
sinks at the poles - Polar easterlies surface winds at poles that
blow from east - Prevailing winds winds that usually blow from
same direction - Tradewinds
- Polar easterlies
- Prevailing westerlies which blow (SW in N. Hemi
NW in S. Hemi) in the mid-latitudes.
34Polar Front
Polar Front
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36Continental Local Winds Sec 4
- Because of tilt of Earth, relative position of
sun changes over year - Causes seasons
- Temperature changes
- Changes in global winds
- Also affected by positions of continents
- Highest temps in N. Hemi often N of equator
- Sun causes air to heat, rise, flow toward poles
37Effects of Seasons Continents
- Summer
- continents hotter than oceans
- heats up ( cools down) faster than water b/c
absorbs ( radiates) heat better - hot land heats air above it, becomes less dense,
rises, causing low pressure - Oceans cooler than land
- Heats up ( cools down) slower than land b/c does
not absorb ( radiate) heat quickly - Cool water, air above cooler, more dense, higher
pressure - Highs lows determine direction of prevailing
winds at various locations - Winter ? opposite from summer
38- Direction of winds change seasonally ? monsoons
- Most dramatic in southern Asia
- Winter ? cold, dry winds
- Summer ? warm, moist winds heavy rains
39Local Winds
- Extends 100 km or less
- Caused mostly by differences in temperature
- Examples
- Land sea breezes
- Mountain valley breezes
40Developing a Sea Breeze
- Daytime
- Land heats faster creating warm air above it.
- decreases the pressure ( density)
- air rises.
- low pressure develops over land
- Water heats slower, so it has cooler air above
it. - Increases pressure ( density)
- Air sinks
- High pressure develops over water causing a
difference in pressure. - Wind blows from high (sea) to low (land)
41Developing a Land Breeze
- Nighttime
- Water stays warm longer creating warm air above
it. - decreases the pressure ( density)
- air rises.
- low pressure develops over water
- Land cools faster, so it has cooler air above it.
- Increases pressure ( density)
- Air sinks
- High pressure develops over land causing a
difference in pressure. - Wind blows from high (land) to low (sea)
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