1 / 93

Weather and the Atmosphere NSAP Short Course for SEs and SAs

Weather and the Atmosphere NSAP Short Course for SEs and SAs. About the course. Selected topics and lectures from a CU course – ATOC 1050 (45, 50-min. classes). Because of varied backgrounds – no significant memory of calculus or differential equations is assumed.

phuc
Download Presentation

Weather and the Atmosphere NSAP Short Course for SEs and SAs

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Weather and the AtmosphereNSAP Short Course for SEs and SAs

  2. About the course • Selected topics and lectures from a CU course – ATOC 1050 (45, 50-min. classes). • Because of varied backgrounds – no significant memory of calculus or differential equations is assumed

  3. Please interrupt with short questions when necessary. • Course content goes beyond what is applicable for any individual RAL project, but most is related to some project. • Terminology is important as well as concepts. • Course web site with notes at http://www.rap.ucar.edu/general/events.html

  4. Content SESSION 1 • Part 1 – Composition, mean structure, variables, diurnal and annual cycles • Part 2 – Water in the atmosphere, cloud and precip formation • Part 3 – Winds and their cause; air-masses, fronts and cyclones • Part 4 – Mesoscale processes, severe weather SESSION 2

  5. Part 1Composition of the Atmosphere

  6. The atmosphere – A molecular cocktail

  7. COMPOSITION OF THE ATMOSPHERENEAR EARTH’S SURFACE “Permanent” gases (percent is about the same everywhere) • Nitrogen – 78 % • Oxygen – 21 % • Hydrogen - .00006 % • Others (less than 1 %) – ozone, methane, helium, etc. Variable gases (amount depends on place and time) • Water vapor – 0-4 % • Carbon dioxide – about .037 %

  8. Water vapor – dark-dry, light-humid

  9. CO2 varies with timeUpward trend from 1958-2000, plus seasonal variational Not zero

  10. Content of the atmosphere in addition to gases • Mineral particles – dust from ground, man-made pollution • Water droplets – clouds, fog • Water drops – rain • Ice – small crystals, snow flakes, hail

  11. Structure of the atmosphere • Varies depending on the meteorological conditions • But we can talk about average conditions - horizontal structure (as shown on a weather map) - vertical structure

  12. Vertical structure of the atmosphere • First – how deep is it? White line is the thickness of the atmosphere (99% of molecules) Earth

  13. Within this thin atmosphere, there are different ways of defining layers • How temperature changes with height (increase versus decrease with height) • Composition (mixture of gases) • Electrical structure • Turbulence intensity

  14. Different Layers of the Atmosphere Planetary boundary layer – more later

  15. A Glossary of Weather Variables • Air temperature • Air pressure • Humidity – amount of water vapor • Clouds • Precipitation – rate, type, distribution • Wind – direction and speed, turbulence intensity • Visibility

  16. Air Temperature

  17. Temperature • Related to rate of motion of molecules: The warmer the air, the more rapidly the molecules move. • Primary temperature scales • Fahrenheit (F): freezing point of water = 32 F, boiling point = 212 F • Celsius (C): freezing = 0 C, boiling =100 C • Absolute (A) or Kelvin (K): absolute zero = 0 A = -273 C (all molecular motion stops) • Temperature observations near the surface (2 m) are reported in degrees F, and above that are reported in degrees C.

  18. Vertical Temperature Structure of the Atmosphere Commercial Aircraft All the Weather

  19. Denver temperature profile at 5:00 AM 28 Feb 03 Stratosphere Tropopause Up Temp Dry adiabatic lapse rate reference lines Troposphere

  20. Air Pressure

  21. Why do we care about pressure?

  22. Air Pressure - Definition • Pressure = force/area (e.g., pounds per square inch) 1) Hydrostatic pressure – weight of the atmosphere above the surface 2) Dynamic pressure – force of the wind (e.g., against a door)

  23. Air Pressure - Units • In this course, pressure is expressed in millibars (mb) – average sea-level pressure = 1013 mb • In the science literature, it is expresses in hecta Pascals (hPa = 1 mb) • Sometimes (e.g., in public weather forecasts) it is given in inches of mercury – average = 29.92 in. mercury • Surface pressure values are “adjusted” to sea level, so that values show high and low pressure patterns rather than the elevation of the observation

  24. How is sea-level pressure estimated for plotting on weather maps?

  25. Vertical Pressure Variation in the Atmosphere

  26. Air Density

  27. General definition of density - Mass per unit volume • Air density – Mass (e.g., kilograms) of air molecules per unit volume (cubic meter) More dense Less Dense ******************************************** * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

  28. Density Variation With Height

  29. Humidity • A measure of the amount of water vapor in the air • There are many different measures of humidity • Relative humidity • Vapor pressure • Dew point temperature • Specific humidity • Absolute humidity

  30. Clouds • Percent of sky covered by clouds • Types of clouds • Cumulus • Cirrus • Stratus, etc.

  31. Wind • Speed – miles per hour or knots (nautical miles per hour), meters per second • Direction - Given in terms of the direction from which the wind is blowing. A northwesterly wind is blowing from the northwest. • Gustiness – turbulent component of wind • Horizontal wind is measured, but vertical wind is also very important

  32. Turbulence near the ground

  33. Visibility • The maximum distance at which an observer can distinguish an object against the sky as a background • May be limited by fog, air pollution, etc.

  34. Precipitation • Type of precipitation - rain, snow, sleet, hail, etc. • Rate at which it is falling (inches/hour)

  35. Scales of atmospheric motion -Storms of all sizes • Mid-latitude cyclones – 1000+ mile • Hurricanes – 500+ miles • Thunderstorms – 1-100 miles • Tornadoes – few hundred yards • Turbulence – centimeters-meters

  36. Measuring the atmosphere • Weather balloons, or radiosondes make “upper-air” measurements of horizontal wind, temperature and humidity.

  37. Radiosonde –helium balloon withmeasurement instruments

  38. Measuring the atmosphere • Weather balloons, or radiosondes make “upper-air” measurements of horizontal wind, temperature and humidity. • Surface weather stations (land and seas) measure horizontal wind, temperature, humidity, cloud cover • Satellites can estimate winds, temperature and humidity

  39. Radiosonde launch locations

  40. “Surface” observations - NWS

  41. Zooming in to see even more Northern Utah

  42. Other data sources • Cloud-track winds • Water-vapor-track winds • NEXRAD radar winds and reflectivity • Doppler lidar winds • Wind profilers • Commercial aircraft – TAMDAR, AMDAR

  43. The Planetary Boundary Layer – more later, but here’s a preview • BL - the region of the troposphere immediately above Earth’s surface where vertical turbulent transfers of heat, moisture and momentum are large compared to the troposphere above. • Daytime temperature lapse rate is nearly dry adiabatic, or neutral (9.8 C/km). • Nighttime temperature lapse rate is typically stable (inversion).

  44. Why care about boundary layers • We live there. • Transport and diffusion of plumes takes place primarily in the boundary layer. • Some of our meteorological conditions at the surface originate higher in the troposphere (precip, large scale T changes, etc.), but many develop within the BL. • Air pollution (public health) –most originates at surface and stays within BL • Diurnal temperature fluctuations • Mesoscale wind circulations

More Related