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ES 1111

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... order to survive, a tiny droplet requires supersaturated air ... clouds have a high number of tiny CCN. ... Haze results when many tiny CCN particles fail to ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ES 1111


1
ES 1111
  • Precipitation

2
Formation of Cloud Droplets
  • When the air reaches saturation, the condensation
    of water vapor into tiny cloud droplets may begin
  • In order for water vapor to condense, particles
    in the atmosphere called cloud condensation
    nuclei (CCN) are required
  • Without CCN, a relative humidity of several
    hundred percent would be needed to keep a tiny
    cloud droplet from evaporating away

3
Cloud Condensation Nuclei
  • Common types of cloud condensation nuclei are
  • Dust
  • Clay
  • Organic particles from land surfaces
  • Salt crystals from sea spray
  • Gas-to-particle conversion particulates

4
Marine vs. Continental CCN
  • Division between marine and continental depends
    primarily on the origin of the air and the
    particles it contains (not where the cloud itself
    is located)
  • Marine clouds tend to have smaller numbers of
    particles but a larger range of droplet sizes
    than continental clouds

5
Droplet Distributions
  • Figure 5.1, Page 76

6
The Solute Effect
  • When CCN is dissolved in the water droplet, a
    solution is formed
  • This solution droplet is more stable than a pure
    water droplet (does not evaporate as easily)
  • Therefore, it is possible for the impure droplet
    to exist and grow with a relative humidity below
    100

7
The Curvature Effect
  • Droplets are curved, but the saturation curves
    you saw applied to a flat surface
  • For a tiny droplet, the surface area of the
    droplet is extreme compared to the mass of the
    droplet
  • This means it is easy for the tiny droplet to
    evaporate away
  • In order to survive, a tiny droplet requires
    supersaturated air (relative humidity more than
    100)
  • Supersaturation values in excess of 101 are rare

8
Growth of Cloud Droplets
  • The solute effect and the curvature effect both
    work together to dictate how a droplet will grow
  • At small sizes, the solute effect dominates
  • At large sizes, the solution becomes more diluted
    and the curvature effect dominates

9
Growth of a Cloud Droplet
  • Figure 5.2, Page 76

10
Failure of a Cloud Droplet
  • Continental clouds have a high number of tiny
    CCN.
  • All these CCN compete for water vapor and affect
    the way the collection of droplets can grow
  • If the competition is high for water vapor, the
    supersaturation values may not reach the
    necessary amount for the droplets to continue
    growing
  • Haze results when many tiny CCN particles fail to
    grow any further
  • Marine clouds, with some larger droplets in the
    distribution, will have a better chance of
    getting over the hump and continue growing into
    raindrops

11
Supercooled Water and Ice Nuclei
  • Recall that in order to have ice, we need to have
    the water arrange itself into a crystalline
    structure
  • Particulates know as ice nuclei have a structure
    similar to ice and allow ice to form readily
  • Without ice nuclei in the droplet, it is possible
    for the water droplet to remain a liquid when its
    temperature is below freezing! This is called a
    supercooled water droplet
  • It is possible to have liquid water present at
    temperatures down to -40 C!

12
Growth of a Raindrop
  • The growth of a cloud droplet is extremely slow,
    and simple growth by condensation is not what
    forms raindrops
  • There are two processes that explain the
    formation of precipitation-sized particles
  • Collision and Coalescence Process
  • Bergeron-Findeisen Mechanism

13
Falling Droplets
  • All particles suspended in the air have a
    terminal velocity, which is the speed at which
    the force of gravity downward is equal to the
    force of friction acting upward
  • The more massive an object, the faster the
    terminal velocity will be
  • A droplet 10 µm in diameter will have a terminal
    velocity of 1/10 of a mm per second, while a
    droplet 1 mm in diameter will fall at 10 m/s
  • The fall velocity of a particle is the terminal
    velocity of the particle minus any updraft
    velocity that will oppose the objects freefall
    down to the ground

14
Collision-Coalescence Process
  • This process is important in warm clouds where
    the precipitation particles are all liquid
  • Larger droplets, having a higher fall speed, will
    collide with smaller drops and coalesce together
    into a bigger drop
  • Collision is more efficient as the larger droplet
    increases in size
  • A smaller droplet is more likely to collide with
    a larger drop if the difference in size is
    significant (having a wide variety of drop sizes
    in the cloud is helpful, as in the marine
    environment)

15
Bergeron-Findeisen Mechanism
  • This process dominates in cold clouds, where we
    have all three phases in water present solid,
    liquid, and gas
  • In order to have ice, we must have a cloud whose
    temperature is below 32 F
  • Recall from the previous chapter that there was a
    difference in the saturation vapor pressure over
    ice and over water

16
Saturation Curve Revisited
  • Figure 4.3, Page 62

17
Bergeron-Findeisen Mechanism
  • The saturation vapor pressure over ice is less
    than the saturation vapor over water
  • Lets start with a water droplet that is in
    saturated conditions
  • When we are saturated, the condensation of water
    vapor into the droplet is balanced by the
    evaporation of water off of the droplet
  • The addition of an ice crystal nearby will be in
    a supersaturated environment

18
Goodbye Water Droplet!
  • If the ice crystal is in an environment that is
    supersaturated, water vapor will deposit on the
    ice crystal faster than it sublimates off of the
    ice crystal
  • The water vapor content in the cloud will drop,
    and we no longer will have saturated conditions
    with respect to the liquid water drop
  • Finding itself in subsaturated air, the water
    droplet has evaporation exceed condensation,
    which adds water vapor to the cloud but causes
    the droplet to shrink in size
  • After evaporation of water vapor sufficient to
    make the conditions saturated with respect to
    liquid water once again, the droplet stops
    shrinking
  • But, we still have that ice crystal and it is
    still in supersaturated conditions
  • Through this process, the ice crystal will grow
    at the expense of the liquid water drop

19
Other Cold Cloud Processes
  • Riming is when supercooled water droplets collide
    with an ice crystal and instantly freeze on the
    ice crystal. Hail formation is due to riming
  • Ice crystals at or above -5 C tend to be sticky
    due to a film of water on the surface. Ice
    crystals can then stick together in a process
    called aggregation

20
Warm vs. Cold Clouds
  • Not all clouds are exclusively warm or cold
  • The bottom part of the cloud may be warm (and
    have the collision and coalescence process
    dominate)
  • The top part of the cloud will most like find
    itself in sufficiently cold air to have the
    Bergeron-Findeisen Process dominate
  • Clouds may assist in the growth of precipitation
    by throwing particles into other clouds

21
Cloud Seeding
  • Man has a number of substances that can be used
    to attempt to assist growth
  • Silver Iodide (AgI) has a crystalline structure
    similar to ice, so it serves as a great ice
    nucleus
  • Dry ice chills the air in contact with it to
    temperatures below -40 C and allow ice to
    spontaneously form without ice nuclei
  • Cloud seeding is done to attempt to reduce hail
    size
  • Conclusions whether this technique is successful
    are still being debated

22
Precipitation
  • The fancy term for the solid or liquid water that
    falls to the surface from the sky is hydrometeor
  • The type of hydrometeor that one gets at the
    surface depends on
  • What the hydrometeor started off being
  • What temperature conditions existed during the
    fall

23
Precipitation Types
  • Figure 5.3, Page 78

24
Precipitation Types
  • Disregard the books use of the term sleet the
    British have a different meaning than our use of
    the term
  • Sleet and ice pellets means the same thing in
    the US solid chunks of ice that are NOT hail
  • Hail requires a thunderstorm and may exhibit
    concentric rings when sliced open
  • The controlling factor in getting sleet vs.
    freezing rain is the time it takes to get down to
    the surface
  • Sleet (ice pellets) The falling liquid water
    has sufficient time to freeze solid before it
    hits the ground
  • Freezing rain The falling liquid water does not
    have sufficient time to freeze solid (though may
    be supercooled) before hitting the ground, but it
    freezes once contact is made with the surface
    that is below freezing

25
Precipitation Type and Duration
  • The intensity and duration of the precipitation
    depends on the cloud
  • Cumulus clouds have more vigorous vertical
    motions that result in larger drops and more
    intense precipitation over a shorter period of
    time and over a smaller geographical area
  • Stratus clouds are more persistent, have less
    vertical motion, and have prolonged, steadier,
    and less intense precipitation
  • Intensity decreases as the duration of
    precipitation increases

26
Precipitation Measurement
  • Each form of precipitation is not measured
    independently of each other
  • Most locations report the 24-hour total liquid
    amount that fell. Anything that fell solid is
    melted for this computation
  • Precipitation is measured at most once an hour,
    so intensity information is not given
  • Precipitation is highly variable in space and
    time. There can be significant differences
    between nearby stations over short time periods

27
Rain Days
  • A rain day is the number of 24-hour periods that
    had 0.2 mm or more of rainfall
  • The number of rain days can vary from less than
    one in arid regions to over 180 per year in
    humid, rainy areas
  • The rainiest location could be on top of Mount
    Wai-ale-ale in Hawaii that gets over 11 meters of
    rain and has an average of 335 rain days per
    year!
  • Most locations will have seasonal influences that
    result in variations in rain days and amounts

28
Global Mean Annual Precipitation
  • Figure 5.5, Page 84

29
Tropical Precipitation
  • Most due to convective activity
  • Intense, short-lived storms
  • Highly localized events, so one location may not
    get rain every day even though rain falls in the
    area every day
  • Topographic effects may combine to produce high
    rainfall totals

30
The Monsoon
  • The term monsoon refers to a seasonal shift in
    wind direction
  • The most pronounced monsoon occurs in Asia
    (India, Bangladesh, etc.)
  • In the wet season (summer), warm and moist air
    flows off the Indian Ocean and rises over the
    Himalayas, producing copious rainfall
  • In the dry season (winter), the winds shift to
    blowing drier air from the Asian continent

31
Mid-Latitude Precipitation
  • Associated with low pressure systems and fronts
  • Widespread rainfall over extended periods
  • Amounts depend on the moisture content of the air
    at that particular time
  • Convective activity limited to summer months for
    the most part

32
Regions of Low Precipitation
  • Subtropics, as you will see in the next chapter,
    lack means to lift the air to form clouds and
    precipitation
  • The subtropics have moisture in the atmosphere,
    but high pressure prevents the formation of
    clouds
  • The polar regions lack water vapor to begin with,
    so they have low amounts of precipitation

33
The Thunderstorm
  • Common to almost all regions of the globe
  • Small-scale feature that, due to frequency, may
    contribute significant precipitation
  • Warm, moist air rises due to an unstable
    environment
  • A single thunderstorm undergoes a life cycle of
    three stages

34
Annual Number of Thunderstorms
  • Figure 5.6, Page 86

35
Thunderstorm Life Cycle
  • Cumulus Stage All updrafts, the storm is
    building vertically upward. Cloud droplets form
    in the mid-levels and grow
  • Mature Stage Part updraft and part downdraft,
    the updraft strength is not able to keep the
    hydrometeors aloft, so precipitation falls at the
    surface
  • Dissipating Stage All downdraft, the lack of
    updraft strength allows all precipitation to fall
    down and choke the storm of updraft air

36
Thunderstorm Life Cycle
  • Figure 5.7(a), Page 87

37
Thunderstorm Life Cycles
  • A typical thunderstorm will go through all 3
    stages in the period of 30 minutes to an hour
  • Thunderstorms may group together to form a
    complex, such as a squall line, that can remain
    active for hours

38
The Surface Water Budget
  • If we focus on the amount of soil moisture (for
    agriculture), the surface water budget will look
    like the following
  • ?S (PI) (ERDT)
  • ?S change in the water content of the soil
  • P Precipitation, I Irrigation
  • E Evapotranspiration, R Runoff, D Drainage
    and T storage (in lakes, ponds, etc.)
  • This has an impact on vegetation types found

39
The Surface Water Budget
  • Figure 5.9, Page 89

40
Vegetation vs. Precipitation
  • Figure 5.10, Page 90

41
Latitudinal Hydrological Imbalance
  • On a global scale, there is a balance between
    evaporation and precipitation
  • Horizontal motions can transport moisture to
    other areas
  • The primary source region of water vapor is the
    subtropics, and this vapor is transported towards
    the Equator and the midlatitudes
  • Because of latent heat, the movement of water
    vapor also involves a movement of energy
  • This plays a role in the general circulation of
    our atmosphere, the topic for the next chapter

42
Latitudinal Hydrological Imbalance
  • Figure 5.11, Page 90
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