Title: NATS 101-06 Lecture 6 Seasons and Temperature Variations
1NATS 101-06Lecture 6Seasonsand Temperature
Variations
2Supplemental References for Todays Lecture on
Seasons
- Aguado, E. and J. E. Burt, 2001 Understanding
Weather Climate, 2nd Ed. 505 pp. Prentice Hall.
(ISBN 0-13-027394-5) - Danielson, E. W., J. Levin and E. Abrams, 1998
Meteorology. 462 pp. McGraw-Hill. (ISBN
0-697-21711-6) - Gedzelman, S. D., 1980 The Science and Wonders
of the Atmosphere. 535 pp. John-Wiley Sons.
(ISBN 0-471-02972-6) - Lutgens, F. K. and E. J. Tarbuck, 2001 The
Atmosphere, An Intro-duction to the Atmosphere,
8th Ed. 484 pp. Prentice Hall. (ISBN
0-13-087957-6) - Wallace, J. M. and P. V. Hobbs, 1977 Atmospheric
Science, An Introductory Survey. 467 pp. Academic
Press. (ISBN 0-12-732950-1)
3Reasons for Seasons
- Tilt of Earths Axis - Obliquity
- Angle between the Equatorial Plane and
the Orbital Plane - Eccentricity of Earths Orbit
- Elongation of Orbital Axis
4Eccentricity of Orbit
Perihelion
Aphelion
Ahrens (2nd Ed.), akin to Fig. 2.15
Earth is 5 million km closer to sun in January
than in July. Solar radiation is 7 more intense
in January than in July. Why is July warmer than
January in Northern Hemisphere?
5147 million km
152 million km
Ahrens, Fig. 2.17
6Solar Zenith Angle
- Depends on latitude, time of day season
- Has two effects on an incoming solar beam
- Surface area covered or Spreading of beam
- Path length through atmosphere or Attenuation of
beam
Long Path
Large Area
Equal Energy
23.5o
Small Area
Short Path
Ahrens, Fig. 2.19
7Beam Spreading
- Low Zenith - Large Area, Much Spreading
- High Zenith - Small Area, Little Spreading
8Beam Spreading
9Atmospheric Path Length
10Length of Day
Lutgens Tarbuck, p33
11Day Hours at Solstices - US Sites
- Summer-Winter
- Tucson (32o 13 N) 1415 - 1003
- Seattle (47o 38 N) 1600 - 825
- Anchorage (61o 13 N) 1922 - 528
- Fairbanks (64o 49 N) 2147 - 342
- Hilo (19o 43 N) 1319 - 1046
Arctic Circle
Gedzelman, p67
12Path of Sun
- Hours of daylight increase from winter to summer
pole - Equator always has 12 hours of daylight
- Summer pole has 24 hours of daylight
- Winter pole has 24 hours of darkness
- Note different Zeniths
Danielson et al., p75
13Solar Declination
Solstice
Equinox
Solstice
Aguado Burt, p46
14Noon Zenith Angle at Solstices
- Summer-Winter
- Tucson AZ (32o 13 N) 08o 43 - 55o 43
- Seattle WA (47o 38 N) 24o 08 - 71o 08
- Anchorage AK (61o 13 N) 37o 43 - 84o 43
- Fairbanks AK (64o 49 N) 41o 19 - 88o 19
- Hilo HI (19o 43 N) 3o 47 (north) - 43o
13
Aguado Burt, p46
15Incoming Solar Radiation (Insolation) at the Top
of the Atmosphere
W
C
C
W
Wallace and Hobbs, p346
16Is Longest Day the Hottest Day?
Consider Average Daily Temperature for Chicago IL
USA Today WWW Site
17Radiation Budget
- Summer hemisphere shows a surplus, warms
- Winter hemisphere shows a deficit, cools
- Equator/S. Pole always shows a
surplus/deficit - Why doesnt the equator warm and S. Pole cool?
NH
SH
NH
SH
Lutgens Tarbuck, p51
18Annual Energy Balance
Radiative Warming
Radiative Cooling
Radiative Cooling
NH
SH
Ahrens, Fig. 2.21
- Heat transfer done by winds and ocean currents
- Differential heating drives winds and currents
- We will examine later in course
19Summary
- Tilt (23.5o) is primary reason for seasons
- Tilt changes two important factors
- Angle at which solar rays strike the earth
- Number of hours of daylight each day
- Warmest and Coldest Days of Year
- Occur after solstices, typically around a
month - Requirement for equator to pole Heat Transport
- Done by Atmosphere-Ocean System
20NATS 101-06Now on to Temperature Variations
21Supplemental Reference for Todays Lecture on
Temperature Variations
- Wallace, J. M. and P. V. Hobbs, 1977 Atmospheric
Science, An Introductory Survey. 467 pp. Academic
Press. (ISBN 0-12-732950-1)
22Temperature Questions
- What causes diurnal temperature variations?
- What physical processes can influence daily
temperature variations? - Why is MAX temperature after solar noon?
- Why is MIN temperature just after sunrise?
- What is Wind Chill Factor? (if time allows)
23MAX Temperature near Surface
Ahrens, Fig 3.1
Solar SW
Convection
Conduction
24MIN Temperature near Surface
Outgoing Infrared
Ahrens, Fig 3.3
Absorbed Re-emitted Infrared
Conduction
25Daily Range of Temperatures
MAX-MIN difference decreases with height above
ground level
2612 and 00 UTC TUS Sounding
- MAX-MIN Range
- 12oC at 925 mb 6oC at 910 mb 2oC at 800 mb
0oC by 700 mb - Range decreases with height
isobars
isotherms
Diurnal Range
Inversion
27Growth and Decay of Inversion Evening
Morning
Height
Height
t3
t3
t2
t2
t1
t1
t0
t0
Temperature
Temperature
28What Affects Inversion Strength?
- Cloud Cover
- Clear skies-strong inversion
- Cloudy skies-weak inversion
- Land Characteristics
- Snow cover-strong inversion
- Bare ground-weaker inversion
- Wind Speed
- Calm winds-strong inversion
- Strong winds-weak inversion
29Review Is Longest Day the
Hottest Day?
Average Daily Temperature for Chicago IL
USA Today WWW Site
30When Does MAX-MIN Occur?
- When incoming SW exceeds outgoing IR
- Temperature rises
- When outgoing IR exceeds incoming SW
- Temperature falls
- MAX occurs
- Late afternoon
- MIN occurs
- Just after sunrise
Ahrens, Fig 3.2
31Winter-Summer Temperature Variations at Sea Level
DJF
Ahrens, Figs. 3.8, 3.9
100oF
10oF
- Continents undergo larger changes than oceans
- High latitudes undergo larger changes than low
latitudes
JJA
32Controls of Temperature
- Latitude
- Average temperatures in middle latitudes
decrease by 5-10oC every 10o latitude - Elevation
- Lapse rate in troposphere is 6.5oC/km
- Tucson (2,500 ft) July Max - 100oF
- Mt. Lemmon (8,500 ft) July Max - 76oF
33Controls of Temperature
- Ocean Currents and Prevailing Winds
- Warm-Gulf Stream
- Cold-California Current
- Land versus Water
- Heat capacity of water is 5X that of land
- Absorbed solar energy is distributed a greater
depth in water than in land
34Specific Heat Capacity
- Heat required to raise temperature of 1 gm of
mass 1oC. - Rock has lower heat capacity than water
35Water-Soil Heating Depth
36Soil Temperature
Wallace and Hobbs, p347
37Ocean Temperature
Wallace and Hobbs, p348
38Ice Formation
Wallace and Hobbs, p348
39Wind Chill
- Still air is poor conductor lack of wind allows
insulating layer of still air to form near skin - Wind blows insulating layer of air from skin
Forced convection or heat transport by advection
40Summary
- Balance between incoming and outgoing energy
controls temperature rises and falls - MAX late afternoon, MIN just after sunrise
- Diurnal temp. changes are largest at ground
- Affected by wind, cloud cover, land type
- Winter-Summer changes
- Largest over land, high latitudes
- Temperature Controls
- Latitude, Altitude, Land-Sea, Ocean Currents
41Assignment
- Ahrens
- Atmospheric Moisture
- Pages 77-89, B 430, D 433-436
- Problems 4.1, 4.2, 4.5, 4.6, 4.9, 4.10