Title: Water in the Environment
1(No Transcript)
2Atlas 2m thermal infrared image, Atlanta, GA
3Units kW/m2/day Source R. L. Sass, Rice Univ.
, Houston, TX http//www.ruf.rice.edu/sass/UHI.h
tml
4Atmospheric Moisture
5Environmental Significance of Water
- Important component of global energy fluxes
- (latent heat)
- Powerful agent of erosion
- Universal solvent transports nutrients and
contaminants
- Required for biological processes availability
determines species distributions
6Outline
- Hydrologic cycle (water balance)
- Atmospheric moisture (precipitation)
- Clouds and implications for climate change
71. Hydrologic Cycle
8Hydrologic Cycle
9Water Balance
- Describes the relationship among fluxes of water
Land surface
Oceans
Precipitation
Input
Input
Evaporation Transpiration
Output --
Output
Runoff
Output
Input
Land Precipitation Runoff
Evapotranspiration Oceans Precipitation Run
off Evaporation
10Water Balance
- Describes the relationship among fluxes of water
Land surface
Precipitation
Input
Evaporation Transpiration
Output
Runoff
Output
Land Precipitation - Evapotranspiration Runoff
112. Atmospheric Moisture
12Atmospheric Moisture
- Amount of moisture held in air depends upon air
temperature
26 g/kg
15 g/kg
2 g/kg
13Atmospheric Moisture
http//www.weather.com
Dew point temperature Temperature of an air ma
ss at which it is saturated with moisture
14Atmospheric Moisture
http//www.weather.com
Relative humidity Amount of water vapor curren
tly in air relative to what air could hold at
that temperature if saturated
If air on 70o F day held 5 g/kg water,
RH 5/15 33
15Atmospheric Moisture
Who cares?
16Atmospheric Moisture
As air rises, it cools. Cooler air holds less m
ositure
Adiabatic Cooling
17Atmospheric Lifting Mechanisms
Convection local heating
18Atmospheric Lifting Mechanisms
Orographic Lifting topographic barriers
19Atmospheric Lifting Mechanisms
Frontal Lifting cold / warm air masses
20Atmospheric Lifting Mechanisms
Convergence high / low pressure gradients
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23Monga Bay, Peru
24Worldwide annual precipitation
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263. Clouds
27Clouds
28Clouds
29Clouds
Cloud form
- Stratiform - horizontal
- Cumuliform - vertical
- Cirroform wispy, ice crystals
30Role of Clouds in Global Climate System
http//www.giss.nasa.gov/research/briefs/delgenio_
03/
31Role of Clouds in Global Climate System
32Role of Clouds in Global Climate System
33Role of Clouds in Global Climate System
Low clouds reflect shortwave radiation
34Role of Clouds in Global Climate System
Global albedo without clouds
Source E. F. Harrisson et al.,
http//eumetcal.meteo.fr/euromet/english/satmet/s8
220/s8220210.htm
35Role of Clouds in Global Climate System
36Role of Clouds in Global Climate System
Global longwave radiation
Source Eugene S. Takle, 2006
http//www.meteor.iastate.edu/gccourse/influ/influ
_lecture_new.html
37Implications of clouds for climate change
- Surface warming may induce more cloud formation
- Clouds reduce incoming shortwave (albedo)
- Clouds increase counterradiated longwave
(greenhouse gas)
- Clouds introduce considerable uncertainty to
climate change scenarios
38Summary
- Hydrologic cycle describes processes controlling
fluxes of water
- Water balance used to describe relationship
between precipitation, runoff and
evaporation/transpiration
- Moisture content of air is temperature dependent
(warmer air holds more moisture)
- Air must be cooled for precipitation to occur
(atmospheric lifting mechanisms)
39Summary (cont.)
- Atmospheric lifting creates clouds.
- Clouds have varying effects on net radiation
- Effects of climate change on cloud formation
introduces considerable uncertainty into
predictions