Title: PowerPoint Presentation - Geophysics 189 Natural Hazards
1Principles of Weather
Hurricane Jeanne, 2004
2Outline
- Impact of severe weather
- Role of solar radiation
- Properties of water, air masses
- Effects from Earths rotation
3Severe Weather
- Includes thunderstorms, cyclones, floods,
hurricanes, tornadoes - Counting all natural hazard effects, severe
weather leads to 75 of yearly fatalities and
damage
42004 - Hurricanes Jeanne, Ivan, Frances, and
Charley produced 150 fatalities, 41.5 billion
damage (from NOAA website)
5Weather vs. Climate
- Weather condition of the atmosphere at any
particular time/place - Made of several elements
- Air temperature and pressure
- Humidity
- Clouds
- Precipitation
- Visibility
- Wind
6Weather vs. Climate
- Climate Average weather
- Described for a particular region over a
specified time
7Atmosphere
- Thin gas envelope that surrounds the planet
- Most within 30 km of the surface of the planet
- Mostly composed of
- Nitrogen
- Oxygen
- Smaller amounts of water, carbon dioxide, ozone
- Clouds with liquid water and ice
- Important shields from UV radiation, space junk
8Atmosphere
- Made of several layers
- Troposphere
- Stratosphere
- Mesosphere
- Thermosphere
- Weather contained within troposphere
- From surface to 11 km above, air molecules are
well stirred, rising and falling in this layer
9Air pressure
- Air molecules have weight - exert force on
surface (atmospheric pressure) - Weight of air above, so pressure decreases with
height - Measured in units of pressure (millibars)
- Sea level atm. pressure 1013 mbar
- Commonly measured with barometer
- Height of mercury
- 1013 mbar 30 inches barometric pressure
10Air pressure and temperature
- Packet of air rises
- Air pressure lower, air expands
- Temperature related to air molecule speed
- Expansion lowers speed, lowers temp
- Rising air expands, cools
- Packet of air sinks
- Air pressure higher, air contracts
- Squeezing leads to more collisions, higher speed,
higher temp - Sinking air contracts, warms
11Role of Atmospheric Heating
- Sun provides significant amount of heat
- Reflected and absorbed
- Most radiation absorbed in equatorial belt
(32ºN-34ºS) - Polar latitudes have net cooling
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13Fate of Heat
- Some trapped in rock at surface
- Some absorbed in water/water vapor in air
- Different amounts of heat lead to heat transport,
moving air masses, storms
14Water and Heat
- High heat capacity
- Water and air can move heat around through
convection - Water changing phase - change in heat
- Ice to water latent heat stored in water
- Water evaporation latent heat of vaporization
- Vapor condensation latent heat of condensation
15Temperature and Water
- Amount of water in air humidity
- Higher temperatures mean more water vapor can be
stored in the air (higher humidity)
16Back to Air Movement
- Convection warm air rises, cool air sinks
- Warm rising air -
- Pressure, temp lower, less water vapor it can
hold. Condensation forms clouds. - Cool sinking air -
- Pressure, temp higher, can hold more water vapor.
Clear skies result.
17Vertical vs. Horizontal Motion of Air
- Vertical motions set up pressure differences at
surface - Hot air at surface wants to rise - lower
pressures at surface - Cold air sinking leads to higher pressures at
surface - Horizontal motion from high to low pressures
- If pressure gradient only force, winds move
strictly from high to low pressure
18Examples of Surface Pressures
- Commonly find high pressures in southwest US in
summer - Arctic in winter - surface high pressures
19Effects from Rotation
- Toss a ball on a merry-go-round
Still straight-line motion, but merry-go-round
moves beneath it. Sitting on merry-go-round, it
appears like some force deflected the ball.
20Coriolis Effect
- Apparent force due to rotation of Earth (changes
direction, not speed) - Northern Hemisphere winds deflected to right
- Southern Hemisphere winds deflected to the left
- Effect greatest near poles, less at equator
- Important for paths of ocean currents, large
winds, hurricanes
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22Effects on Winds
- If just difference in solar radiation (no
rotation), get simple convection cells (Hadley
cell)
Too Simple!
23- Better description is a 3 cell model
- Also patterns influenced by continents, seasonal
variations in radiation
Example fig
24Jet Streams
- Narrow high velocity winds that flow west to east
- Operate high in the atmosphere (10-14 km)
- 2 main jets
- Polar more impact on weather
- Subtropical
25Polar Jet Stream
- West-east motion occurs along boundary between
polar cells and mid-latitude cells - High temperature contrast leads to high velocity
of the jet stream - Path is variable, influences movement of large
air masses - Summer over Canada
- Winter over U.S.
26Common Polar Jet Stream Path in U.S.
27Characteristics of Large Air Masses
- Polar air masses cool
- Tropical air masses warm
- Land based air masses dry
- Water based air masses moist
- Over North America, dominant direction of motion
is W-E
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29Fronts
- Boundaries of air masses
- Sloping surface separating air masses of
different temperatures, moisture content - Typically where you get clouds, precipitation,
severe weather
30Examples of Fronts
31Fronts
- Advancing cold front pushes warm air up
- Can produce clouds, thunderstorms
- Advancing warm front gentle slope, rises above
cold front - Produces widespread clouds
32- Cold front meeting warm front, bends rain
33Next Time
- Mid-Latitude Cyclones and Thunderstorms
34Midterm Exam
Mean 81.7 A 90-100 B 80-89 C 70-79 D 60-69 F
59 and below
35Problem Questions
- 2 Compressional forces lead to reverse faults
(hanging wall moves up) - 4 New Madrid region is an old rift zone
- 9 Earth is 4.6 billion years old (4600 million)
- 13 Magma viscosity is lowered by higher
temperatures, lower crystal content, lower SiO2
(answer all of these) - 14 Lake Nyos event was a big carbon dioxide
burp!
36Problem Questions
- 17 P waves can travel through solid, liquid,
and gas - Translational slides move down on weak planar
surfaces - Historical earthquakes in the Rio Grande rift
(hint here) have been related to extensional
forces, not compressional forces (answer false)
37Hints for Next Time
- Read each question carefully
- Look for hints in the question
- Attend class, particularly when video clips are
presented (not posted on website)