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1 st Law of Thermodynamics Heat Transfer

1 st Law of Thermodynamics Heat Transfer. Lecture 4 February 18, 2010. 1020. 1016. 1016. 1020. To convert from Z time to CST, subtract 6 hours. 05Z = 11 PM CST. 1020. 1020. 1024. 1016. 1020. 1016. 1024. 1020. 1016. Review from last week.

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1 st Law of Thermodynamics Heat Transfer

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  1. 1st Law of ThermodynamicsHeat Transfer Lecture 4 February 18, 2010

  2. 1020 1016 1016 1020 To convert from Z time to CST, subtract 6 hours. 05Z = 11 PM CST 1020 1020

  3. 1024 1016 1020 1016 1024 1020 1016

  4. Review from last week In a cold cloud, all precipitation begins in the form of snow (ice crystals) • 5 Main Precipitation Types 1. Rain drops of liquid water 2. Snow  ice crystals 3. Sleet frozen rain drops 4. Freezing Rain  rain the freezes on contact with a cold surface 5. Hail  large pieces of ice How do we get this variety if the origin of the precipitation is the same?

  5. Snow • The surface temperature is 25°F (-4°C) and increases with height before decreasing. • However, since the temperature remains below freezing at every height, any precipitation that falls will remain as snow. http://www.srh.noaa.gov/jetstream//synoptic/precip.htm

  6. Flurries -  Light snow falling for short durations. No accumulation or light dusting • Showers - Snow falling at varying intensities for brief periods of time. Some accumulation is possible. • Squalls -  Brief, intense snow showers accompanied by strong, gusty winds. Accumulation may be significant. Snow squalls are best known in the Great Lakes region. • Blowing Snow - Wind-driven snow that reduces visibility and causes significant drifting. • Blizzard - Winds over 35 mph with snow and blowing snow reducing visibility to less than ¼ mile for more than 3 hours. 

  7. Sleet • Surface is below freezing • As snow falls into the layer of air where the temperature is above freezing, the snow flakes partially melt. • As the precipitation reenters the air that is below freezing, the precipitation will re-freeze into ice pellets that bounce off the ground, commonly called sleet. • The most likely place for freezing rain and sleet is to the north of warm fronts. The cause of the wintertime mess is a layer of air above freezing aloft. http://www.srh.noaa.gov/jetstream//synoptic/precip.htm

  8. Freezing Rain • Freezing rain will occur if the warm layer in the atmosphere is deep with only a shallow layer of below freezing air at the surface. • The precipitation can begin as either rain and/or snow but becomes all rain in the warm layer. • The rain falls back into the air that is below freezing but since the depth is shallow, the rain does not have time to freeze into sleet. • Upon hitting the ground or objects such as bridges and vehicles, the rain freezes on contact. http://www.srh.noaa.gov/jetstream//synoptic/precip.htm

  9. Energy • Energy is the ability or capacity to do work on some form of matter • Work is done on matter when matter is either pushed, pulled, or lifted over some distance • Potential energy – how much work that an object is capable of doing PE = mgh • Kinetic energy – the energy an object possesses as a result of its motion KE = ½ mv2

  10. Laws of Thermodynamics • 1st Law of Thermodynamics – Energy cannot be created or destroyed. • Energy lost during one process must equal the energy gained during another • 2nd Law of Thermodynamics – Heat can spontaneously flow from a hotter object to a cooler object, but not the other way around.  • The amount of heat lost by the warm object is equivalent to the heat gained by the cooler object

  11. First Law of Thermodynamics • Conservation of energy: • q = Δe + w • The amount of heat (q) added to a system is equal to the change in internal energy (Δe) of the system plus any work (w) done by the system

  12. Heat • Heat is a form of energy and is the total internal energy of a substance • Therefore the 1st law states that heat is really energy in the process of being transferred from a high temperature object to a lower temperature object. • Heat transfer changes the internal energy of both systems involved • Heat can be transferred by: • Conduction • Convection • Advection • Radiation

  13. Specific Heat • Heat capacity of a substance is the ratio of heat absorbed (or released) by that substance to the corresponding temperature rise (or fall) • The heat capacity of a substance per unit mass is called specific heat. • Can be thought of a measure of the heat energy needed to heat 1 g of an object by 1ºC • Different objects have different specific heat values

  14. 1 g of water must absorb about 4 times as much heat as the same quantity of air to raise its temperature by 1º C • This is why the water temperature of a lake or ocean stays fairly constant during the day, while the temperature air might change more • Because of this, water has a strong effect on weather and climate

  15. Lowest energy LIQUID Highest energy Latent Heat • Latent heat is the amount of energy released or absorbed by a substance during a phase change FOR WATER: 334 J/g released 2260 J/g released SOLID LIQUID GAS 334 J/g absorbed 2260 J/g absorbed SOLID LIQUID GAS

  16. Example 1: Getting out of a swimming pool • In the summer, upon exiting a swimming pool you feel cool. Why? • Drops of liquid water are still on your skin after getting out. • These drops evaporate into water vapor. This liquid to gas phase change causes energy to be absorbed from your skin.

  17. Example 2: Citrus farmers • An orange crop is destroyed if temperatures drop below freezing for a few hours. • To prevent this, farmers spray water on the orange trees. Why? • When the temperature drops below 32oF, liquid water freezes into ice. • This liquid to solid phase change causes energy to be released to the fruit. • Thus, the temperature of the orange remains warm enough to prevent ruin.

  18. The release of latent heat during cloud formation drives many atmospheric processes. • Example 3: Cumulus clouds • Clouds form when water vapor condenses into tiny liquid water drops. • This gas to liquid phase change causes energy to be released to the atmosphere.

  19. Types of Heat Transfer • Heat can be transferred by: • Conduction • Convection • Advection • Radiation

  20. Conduction • Conduction is the transfer of heat from molecule to molecule within a substance • Molecules must be in direct contact with each other • If you put one end of a metal rod over a fire, that end will absorb the energy from the flame. • Molecules at this end of the road will gain energy and begin to vibrate faster • As they do, their temperature increases and they begin to bump into the molecules next to them. • The heat is being transferred from the warmer end to the colder end, and eventually to your finger.

  21. Conduction • The measure of how well a substance can conduct heat depends on its molecular structure. • Air does not conduct heat very well • This is why, in calm weather, the hot ground only warms the air near the surface a few centimeters thick by conduction!

  22. Convection • Convection is the transfer of heat by the mass movement of a fluid (such as water and air) in the vertical direction (up and down) • Convection occurs naturally in the atmosphere • On a sunny day, the Earth’s surface is heated by radiation from the Sun. • The warmed air expands and becomes less dense than the surrounding cold air. • Because the warmed air is less dense (weighs less) than cold air, the heated air rises.

  23. Convection • As the warm air rises, the heavier cold air flows toward the surface to replace the rising air. • This cooler air becomes heated in turn and rises. • The cycle is repeated. • This vertical exchange of heat is called convection and the rising air parcels are known as thermals

  24. Convection • The warm thermals cool as they rise. • In fact, the cooling rate as a parcel rises can be calculated • If the thermal consists of dry air, it cools at a rate of ~10°C/km as it rises. This is called the lapse rate. • Convection is one process by which clouds can form. • As the temperature of the thermal cools, it may reach a point where it reaches saturation (the temp. and dewpoint are the close to the same) • Thermals condense and form a cloud.

  25. Advection • Advection is the transfer of heat in the horizontal direction. • The wind transfers heat by advection • Happens frequently on Earth • Two types: • Warm air advection (WAA): wind blows warm air toward a region of colder air • Cold air advection (CAA): wind blows cold air toward a region of warmer air

  26. “Cold Air Advection” “Warm Air Advection”

  27. Radiation • All things with a temperature above absolute zero emit radiation • Radiation allows heat to be transferred through wave energy • These waves are called electromagnetic waves • The wavelengths of the radiation emitted by an object depends on the temperature of that object (i.e., the sun mainly emits radiative energy in the visible spectrum, and the earth emits radiative energy in the infrared spectrum). • Shorter wavelengths carry more energy than longer wavelengths

  28. A photon of ultra-violet radiation carries more energy than a photon of infrared radiation. • The shortest wavelengths in the visible spectrum are purple, and the longest wavelengths are red.

  29. Radiation Emitted radiation can be: • Absorbed Increasing the internal energy of the gas molecules. • Reflected Radiation is not absorbed or emitted from an object but it reaches the object and is reflected back. The Albedo represents the reflectivity of an object and describes the percentage of light that is sent back. • Scattered Scattered light is deflected in all directions, forward, backward, sideways. It is also called diffused light. • Transmitted Radiation not absorbed, reflected, or scattered by a gas. The radiation passes through the gas unchanged.

  30. Examples of Heat Transfer • http://www.wisc-online.com/objects/ViewObject.aspx?ID=SCE304

  31. Kirchoff’s Law • Good absorbers of a particular wavelength are good emitters at that wavelength and vice versa • Our atmosphere has many selective absorbers Carbon Dioxide, Water Vapor, etc… • These gases are good at absorbing IR radiation but not solar radiation • Thus these gases are called greenhouse gases due to the fact they help to absorb and reemit IR radiation back toward the Earth’s surface thus keeping us warmer then we would otherwise be

  32. Solar Radiation Budget

  33. Earth-Atmosphere Energy Balance

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