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Class 22 -- The Oceans

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Class 22 -- The Oceans ATMOSPHERE CIRCULATION AND WINDS Coriolis effect Prevailing winds and vertical circulation Factors modifying these winds -- Differential ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Class 22 -- The Oceans


1
Class 22 -- The Oceans
  • ATMOSPHERE CIRCULATION AND WINDS
  • Coriolis effect
  • Prevailing winds and vertical circulation
  • Factors modifying these winds
  • -- Differential heating of land and sea

2
What drives the global wind patterns? Warm,
moist air rising at low latitudes Cold, dry air
sinking at higher latitudes
3
Fig. 6-7 If the earth were NOT rotating,
convection cells in the atmosphere would look
like this.
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http//ww2010.atmos.uiuc.edu/
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Coriolis effect Winds traveling long distances
are deflected turn to the right in Northern
Hemis. turn to the left in Southern Hemis. Why?
--Speed due to earths rotation 90 0
km/hr 60 800 km/hr 30 1400 km/hr 0 1600
km/hr
8
Missile fired exactly southward from the north
pole. Viewed from space, the missile follows a
straight path....
But a person in Chicago is moving toward the east
at 1000 km/hr.
What does that person see?
9
Student animations CD-ROM Coriolis effect
animations
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  • Coriolis Effect Practical result
  • Things moving long distances on earth tends to be
    deflected by Coriolis force
  • Deflection in N hemis. TO THE RIGHT(i.e.,
    right hand turn relative to initial direction)
  • in S hemis. TO THE LEFT

12
Amount of deflection depends on ... ... time of
travel (how long it moves) ... distance of travel
(how far it moves) Winds are deflected a large
amount- they move for long time periods over long
distances.
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Fig. 6-7 If the earth were NOT rotating,
convection cells in the atmosphere would look
like this.
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GLOBAL WIND SYSTEM Major zones Trade
Winds Westerlies Polar Easterlies
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1. Convection Cells Occur at the Global scale,
the continental scale, and the local scale
20
  • Convergent divergent zones between cells
  • Convergent -- air masses come together rise
  • Divergent -- sinking air comes down and spreads
    out

21
  • Descending air
  • high atm. Pressure, dry air
  • Ascending air
  • low atm. Pressure, rising moist air, high
    rainfall

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1. Convection Cells Occur at the Global scale,
the continental scale, and the local scale
24
Wind patterns, contd -- Air vs. land
Temperature Contrasts
  • Seasonal heating/cooling cycles
  • Daily /
  • Oceans and lakes -- little T change
  • Land areas -- greater T change

25
Example 1. Convection in coastal areas
Daily cycle of winds in many places (think
Miami Beach) Day onshore winds Night
offshore winds
26
Day
Night
27
San Francisco in the summer Leave your shorts
at home!
28
  • Land heats up- air rises
  • Onshore winds bring warm, moist air over cool
    water (upwelling)
  • This creates Fog- moves inland

29
2. Seasonal monsoon winds (India, Southeast
Asia)
Same idea, larger scale Summer Hot continent
- rising air above it Creates onshore winds (and
rain) Winter Cold continent, offshore winds
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Summer (Wet)
Winter (Dry)
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Summer
Winter
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3. Seasonal changes in H and L pressure zones
over continents and oceans
Summer- Wheres the Low Pressure Area?
34
Winter
Wheres the High Pressure Area?
35
Winter Low Pressure areas over oceans High ..
continents
36
Winter Low Pressure areas over oceans High ..
continents
January
Fig. 6-11
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January
Summer High Pressure areas over oceans Low .
continents
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4. Winds circle around low/high pressure zones
Coriolis effect
  • Northern Hemisphere
  • Clockwise around Hs
  • Counterclockwise around Ls
  • These motions are superimposed on the Trades,
    Westerlies, etc.

4 Jan., 2008
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Hurricanes
  • Hot, humid air rising-- Intense LOW PRESSURE
  • High Storm tides- sea surface dome in low-P
    center
  • Plus wind-driven surface currents
  • Flooding of coastal areas

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Summer
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Winter
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