Title: Met 61
1 2MET 61 Introduction to Meteorology - Lecture 11
- Global Circulation
- Dr. Eugene Cordero
- Reading WH Pg. 297-298
- Ahrens Chapter 11 Wind Global Systems
- Class Outline
- Circulation models
- Jet stream
- El Nino
3Review
- Answer the following question based on material
covered in Chapter 11 of Ahrens. - Explain how and why the average surface pressure
features shift from summer to winter - Why it is impossible on the earth for the Hadley
cell to extend from the pole to the equator? - Why is the jet stream stronger in winter than in
summer? - Explain physically what an El Nino event is.
- Explain how the southern oscillation is related
to El Nino. - Explain why the trade winds are NE and SE in the
northern and southern hemispheres respectively.
4Atmospheric Scales of Motion
- Scale Time Scale Distance Scale Examples
- Macroscale
- -Planetary Weeks to years 1000-40,000km Westerli
es, trade winds - -Synoptic Days to weeks 100-5000km Cyclones,
anticyclones and hurricanes - Mesoscale Minutes to days 1-100km Land-sea
breeze, - thunderstorms and tornadoes
- Microscale Seconds to minutes lt1km Turbulence,
dust devils and gusts
5General Circulation of the Atmosphere
- Large scale flow of the atmosphere
- Focus on both upper level and lower level winds
- Definitions
-
-
- Westerly winds comes from the west
- Southwest winds, comes from the south west
6General Circulation of the Atmosphere
- Large scale flow of the atmosphere
- Focus on both upper level and lower level winds
- Definitions
- Zonal winds (East-West)
- Meridional winds (North-South).
- Westerly winds comes from the west
- Southwest winds, comes from the south west
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8View of the atmosphere in motion
- http//www.atmos.washington.edu/gfd_exp/exp_e/doc/
bc/images/bc01.gif
9Single Cell Model
- Early description of general circulation
- George Hadley (1685-1768) developed this model
- Assumptions
- Earth is primarily heated in the tropics
-
- Surface heat imbalance produces air movement to
balance.
10Single Cell Model
- Early description of general circulation
- George Hadley (1685-1768) developed this model
- Assumptions
- Earth is primarily heated in the tropics
- Thermally direct circulation results from heating
differences - Surface heat imbalance produces air movement to
balance.
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12Three Cell Model
- Proposed to explain how the Earths heat balance
is maintained - Good simple model of global circulation
- Terms
- Hadley Cell The tropical circulation
-
- Horse Latitudes
-
13Three Cell Model
- Proposed to explain how the Earths heat balance
is maintained - Good simple model of global circulation
- Terms
- Hadley Cell The tropical circulation
- ITCZ - intertropical convergence zone
- Horse Latitudes
- Trade Winds
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16Three Cell Model (2)
- Explains much of the observed surface pressure
distributions
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24Monsoon circulation
- The monsoon circulation involves a seasonal
change in the wind direction. - Monsoon circulations have a distinct wet and dry
season. - Monsoon circulations in various places around the
globe. - Southern Asia
- Northern Australia
- Southwest USA
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26Cold and clear skies
27Warm and cloudy
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36What is El Niño?
- El Niño is
-
- El Niño occurs
- The name, El Niño (means boy child in
Spanish) as it often occurs around Christmas time.
37What is El Niño?
- El Niño is
-
- El Niño occurs
- The name, El Niño (means boy child in
Spanish) as it often occurs around Christmas time.
- a warming of the equatorial eastern Pacific Ocean
- about about once every 2 to 7 years
38Normal conditions (sea surface temps)
39El Niño (sea surface temps)
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43ENSO (El Niño-Southern Oscillation)
- The Southern Oscillation
- is the atmospheric part of El Niño
- The Southern Oscillation Index is the pressure
difference between Tahiti and Darwin,
Pressure(Tahiti) Pressure(Darwin) - During El Niño, the pressure is _______ in the
west and _______ in the east - During El Nino, the Southern Oscillation Index is
(positive/negative).
44ENSO (El Niño-Southern Oscillation)
- The Southern Oscillation
- is the atmospheric part of El Niño
- The Southern Oscillation Index is the pressure
difference between Tahiti and Darwin,
Pressure(Tahiti) Pressure(Darwin) - During El Niño, the pressure is _______ in the
west and _______ in the east - During El Nino, the Southern Oscillation Index is
(positive/negative).
higher
lower
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49NAO Index is difference between the polar low and
the subtropical high during the winter season
(December through March)
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51What is the NAO?
- The North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) represents
- winter climate variability in the North Atlantic
region - ranging from central North America to Europe and
much into Northern Asia - The NAO is a large scale seesaw in atmospheric
mass -
52Phases of the NAO
- A positive index
- stronger than usual subtropical high pressure
- deeper than normal Icelandic low.
- The increased pressure gradients produces
- stronger winter storms crossing the Atlantic
Ocean - warm and wet winters in Europe
- cold and dry winters in northern Canada and
Greenland - mild and wet winter conditions in Eastern US
53Phases of the NAO
- A negative index
- weaker than usual subtropical high pressure
- weaker than normal Icelandic low.
- The increased pressure gradients produces
- fewer winter storms crossing the Atlantic Ocean
- Cold air to northern Europe
- Milder winters in Greenland
- More cold outbreaks and snowy conditions to the
Eastern US
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56Activity 12 (Due May 9th)
- Derive each component (horizontal and vertical)
of the vorticity. - For incompressible flow, show how the meridional
winds would change if there exists a positive
zonal wind gradient and no vertical wind shear. - Chapter 11 (Ahrens Meteorology Today)
Questions for Review 5,7,15, - Questions for thought 2,6