Title: Atmospheric moisture
1Atmospheric moisture
2Hydrologic Cycle
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4Evaporation / Condensation
Saturation when evaporation equals condensation
5How we measure moisture in the atmosphere
- Absolute values
- Specific humidity
- Dew point
- Relative values
- Relative humidity
6Saturation specific humidity
- Specific humidity is grams of water per kilogram
of air - Far more water vapor can exist in warmer air than
colder air.
7Relative humidity
- Given as a percentage
- Relates the total amount of water vapor present
relative to the total amount possible - Depends on air temperature and total water vapor
present - Why is this not an absolute measure of water in
the atmosphere?
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9Diurnal cycle of RH
10Dew point
- Temperature to which the air must be cooled to
reach saturation - (i.e. dew will form)
11Dew point/temperature relationships in
unsaturated air (a) and saturated air (b c)
12January Dew Points
13July Dew Points
14Precipitable water climatology (Pitt.)
15How do we reach saturation?
- Addition of water vapor
- Mixing cold air with warm, moist air
- Cooling air to the dew point
16Also
- Effect of Curvature
- Small drops exhibit greater curvature more
evaporation takes place - Supersaturation may occur
- Effect of nuclei
- Droplets are not clean
- Haze can form at RH80
- End result
- Fairly complex saturation values in the
atmosphere
17Ice nuclei
- Ice Nuclei
- Water only freezes at 0oC (32oF) if it has
something to freeze onto - Supercooled droplets can exist down to
-40C - Spontaneous nucleation occurs at -40C
18Measuring humidity
19How do we get air to dew point?
- Diabatic processes
- Adding or removing heat energy
- Adiabatic Processes
- No net exchange of energy (through the expansion
of rising air)
20Lapse rates
- Change of temperature with height
- Dry adiabatic lapse rate
- -1oC/100m (-5.5oF/1000ft)
- Sinking parcels experience compression warming
- Saturated adiabatic lapse rate
- Occurs in saturated air
- -0.5oC/100m (-3.3oF/1000ft)
- Environmental lapse rate
- What is actually happening in the atmosphere
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22A comparison of adiabatic and environmental
cooling rates
23Condensation
- Dew or frost
- Liquid or solid condensation on surface objects
- Diabatic processes
- Fog
- Condensation near the ground of water vapor on
nuclei in the air
24Advection fog / Radiation fog
25Upslope fog and Valley fog
26Precipitation or evaporation fog
27Heavy fog days