270 likes | 367 Views
METO 200 Spring 2002. Everybody talks about the weather but nobody does anything about it. - Charles Dudley Warner. Outline for Lesson 1 and Lesson 2. Weather and Climate. Atmospheric Hazards. The Atmosphere a Part of the Earth System. Height and Structure of the Atmosphere.
E N D
METO 200 Spring 2002 Everybody talks about the weather but nobody does anything about it. - Charles Dudley Warner
Outline for Lesson 1 and Lesson 2 Weather and Climate Atmospheric Hazards The Atmosphere a Part of the Earth System Height and Structure of the Atmosphere Composition of the Atmosphere The Carbon Cycle Ozone Depletion
SUMMERLESS INTERMEDIATE WINTERLESS INTERMEDIATE SUMMERLESS Ancient Greeks may have made the first attempt at climate classification. They devised a simple scheme of based on Earth-Sun relationships. 23.5 ° N 23.5 ° S
German climatologist Wladimir Köppen devised a system to present the general world patterns climate. The system uses easily obtained data. Q. Any guess what criteria might be used? A. precipitation temperature
Humid Tropical Dry Humid middle-latitude mild winters Humid middle-latitude severe winters Polar
Mean Percentage of possible sunshine for November Typical Weather Map Typical Climatology Map
The Atmosphere as Part of the Earth System. Earth’s Fours Spheres: - Atmosphere - Lithosphere - Hydrosphere - Biosphere
Atmosphere The life giving gaseous envelope surrounding Earth
Lithosphere The outer shell of Earth’s Surface
Hydrosphere The water portion of our the planet
Biosphere ….jungles in South America, grasslands and forests in North America, fish and kelp and whales in the ocean, birds in the air, animals on the farms, and people!
Dry Wet
Tropopause Stratopause Mesopause 1. Troposphere- literally means region where air “turns over” -temperature usually decreases (on average ~6.5°C/km) with altitude 2. Stratosphere- layer above the tropopause, little mixing occurs in the stratosphere, unlike the troposphere, where “turbulent mixing” is common 3. Mesosphere- defined as the region where temperature again decreases with height. 4. Thermosphere- region with very little of the atmosphere’s mass. high energy radiation received by the thermosphere (high temperatures experienced). A small density of molecules (not much “heat” would be felt).
In meteorology it is helpful to refer to altitude as a certain pressure value rather than a height. 850 mb 1500 m (5000 ft) 700 mb 3000 m (10,000 ft) 500 mb 5500 m (18000) 300 mb 9000 m (30,000)
The Jet Stream (located near the top of the troposphere) is important in the transfer of moisture (and energy) around the globe and, therefore, central to weather processes.
500 mb is convenient to look at because this about the Middle of the tropopause.
700 mb is a location in the tropopause where vertical motion is often measured.
850 mb is good place to look for temperature changes….any thoughts why?
Weather at the Earth’s surface is what we are interested in, but, processes aloft dictate our weather.
N2 CH4 Trace Gases O2 H2 O3 CO N2O SO2, NO2 C FC’s Ar CO2 Inert Gases Tropospheric Composition