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Weather

Weather. By Joshua Carvajal , Amy Garcia and Yelena Torres. Instruments. A THERMOMETER measures the air temperature. A BAROMETER measures air pressure. A RAIN GAUGE measures the amount of rain that has fallen over a specific time period.

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Weather

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  1. Weather By Joshua Carvajal, Amy Garcia and Yelena Torres

  2. Instruments • A THERMOMETER measures the air temperature. • A BAROMETER measures air pressure. • A RAIN GAUGE measures the amount of rain that has fallen over a specific time period. • A WIND VANE is an instrument that determines the direction from which the wind is blowing.

  3. Weather vs. climate weather climate Weather describes the short-term state of the atmosphere. • Climate is the average weather usually taken over a 30-year time period for a particular region and time period.

  4. Weather • weather is important because we need that to live • There’s a lot of different kind of weather • Sometimes weather can be danger • Some weather makes tornado hot and cold

  5. What are clouds? A cloud is a large collection of very tiny droplets of water or ice crystals. The droplets are so small and light that they can float in the air.

  6. Why do clouds float? A cloud is made up of liquid water droplets. A cloud forms when air is heated by the sun. As it rises, it slowly cools it reaches the saturation point and water condenses, forming a cloud. As long as the cloud and the air that its made of is warmer than the outside air around it, it floats!

  7. Why do clouds turn gray? • Clouds are made up of tiny water droplets or ice crystals, usually a mixture of both. • The water and ice scatter all light, making clouds appear white. • If the clouds get thick enough or high enough all the light above does not make it through, hence the gray or dark look. • Also, if there are lots of other clouds around, their shadow can add to the gray or multicolored gray appearance.

  8. How do clouds move? Clouds move with the wind. High cirrus clouds are pushed along by the jet stream, sometimes traveling at more than 100 miles-per-hour. When clouds are part of a thunderstorm they usually travel at 30 to 40 mph.

  9. Clouds • Cirrus clouds are the most common of the high clouds. They are composed of ice and are thin, wispy clouds blown in high winds into long streamers. Cirrus clouds are usually white and predict fair to pleasant weather. By watching the movement of cirrus clouds you can tell from which direction weather is approaching. When you see cirrus clouds, it usually indicates that a change in the weather will occur within 24 hours.

  10. Stratus clouds Stratus clouds are uniform grayish clouds that often cover the entire sky. They resemble fog that does not reach the ground. Usually no precipitation falls from stratus clouds, but sometimes they may drizzle. When a thick fog "lifts," the resulting clouds are low stratus.

  11. Cumulus clouds • Cumulus clouds • are puffy clouds that sometimes look like pieces of floating cotton. The base of each cloud is often flat and may be only 1000 m (330 ft) above the ground. The top of the cloud has rounded towers. When the top of the cumulus resembles the head of a cauliflower, it is called cumulus congestus or towering cumulus. These clouds grow upward, and they can develop into a giant cumulonimbus, which is a thunderstorm cloud. Cumulus clouds are puffy clouds that sometimes look like pieces of floating cotton. The base of each cloud is often flat and may be only 1000 m (330 ft) above the ground. The top of the cloud has rounded towers. When the top of the cumulus resembles the head of a cauliflower, it is called cumulus congests or towering cumulus. These clouds grow upward, and they can develop into a giant cumulonimbus, which is a thunderstorm cloud.

  12. Tornado tornado is a violent rotating column of air extending from a thunderstorm to the ground. The most violent tornadoes are capable of tremendous destruction with wind speeds of up to 300 mph. They can destroy large buildings, uproot trees and hurl vehicles hundreds of yards. They can also drive straw into trees. Damage paths can be in excess of one mile wide to 50 miles long.

  13. What is a hurricane? A hurricane is an intense, rotating oceanic weather system that possesses maximum sustained winds exceeding 119 km/hr (74 mph). It forms and intensifies over tropical oceanic regions. Hurricanes are generally smaller than storms in mid-latitudes, typically about 500 km (311 miles) in diameter. At the ocean’s surface, the air spirals inward in a counterclockwise direction. This cyclonic circulation becomes weaker with height, eventually turning into clockwise (anticyclonic) outflow near the top of the storm

  14. What is an earthquake? An earthquake is a shaking of the ground caused by the sudden breaking and movement of large sections (tectonic plates) of the earth's rocky outermost crust. The edges of the tectonic plates are marked by faults (or fractures). Most earthquakes occur along the fault lines when the plates slide past each other or collide against each other.

  15. SEASONS The seasons are caused by the tilt of the Earth's rotational axis away or toward the sun as it travels through its year-long path around the sun.

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