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NWS-COMET Hydrometeorology Course 9 –24 May 2000. Meteorology Primer. Presented by: Pete Stamus Tues-Wed, 9-10 May 2000 Hydromet 00-3. Peter A. Stamus Research Associate - Senior Meteorologist CSU/Cooperative Institute for Research in the Atmosphere (CIRA) and
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NWS-COMETHydrometeorology Course9 –24 May 2000 Meteorology Primer Presented by: Pete Stamus Tues-Wed, 9-10 May 2000 Hydromet 00-3
Peter A. Stamus Research Associate - Senior Meteorologist CSU/Cooperative Institute for Research in the Atmosphere (CIRA) and Colorado Research Associates (CORA) 303-415-9701 x224 303-415-9702 (fax) stamus@co-ra.com
Purpose of the primer • Basic understanding of meteorological processes. • Starting point for the rest of Hydromet • To give you a semester-long Introduction to Meteorology course in 8 hours.
Atmosphere StructureFun facts • Standard atmosphere • Very long term average for mid-latitudes • Average surface pressure 1013 mb • Average surface temperature 59 oF • 1/2 of the mass of the atmosphere (500 mb) below 6 km (3.7 miles)
Atmosphere StructureFun facts • Lapse rate (decrease in temperature in the vertical) Troposphere: +15 oC (at sfc) to ~ -50 oC (at 10 km) -6.5 oC / km
Water vapor in the atmosphereThe most important parameter we attempt to measure and forecast. • Clouds • Precipitation • Energy Transfer
Evaporation and Condensation • Evaporation • Fast molecules escape, slower remain cooling process • Condensation • Slower molecules collide, form droplets, droplets fall, faster molecules remain warming process
Evaporation and Condensation (cont.) • The Evaporation/Condensation process transfers heat energy to the atmosphere • Latent Heat of Condensation
Evaporation and Condensation (cont.)Fun facts • Wind enhances evaporation • Warm water evaporates faster than cool water • Air temperature affects evaporation rate • Cool air, slower molecules, condensation more likely, slows evaporation • Warm air can hold more water vapor before saturation than cold air
Relative Humidity and Dew Point Parcel B Parcel A Pressure at 1000 mb T = 10 oC (50 oF) e = 12.3 mb es = 12.3 mb T = 20 oC (68 oF) e = 12.3 mb es = 23.7 mb RH = (e / es) x 100 = 100% RH = (e / es) x 100 = 52% Therefore: Td = 10 oC for Parcel B Dew point = Temperature to which air must be cooled at constant pressure to reach saturation. It is a measure of the air’s actual water vapor content. Relative Humidity is a measure of the degree of saturation of the air.
Energy Budget • Incoming solar • Emitted long-wave • Transfer with latitude • Long-term balance
Lab 1 Basic Surface Features/Moisture
Atmospheric Pressure • Pressure = total weight of air above • Air is compressible, so gravity concentrates most air molecules near the surface • Atm pressure decreases with height rising air cools, sinking air warms • Greatest pressure variation in vertical, butsmallerhorizontal variations produce winds and weather systems
Lab 2 3-D Atmospheric Structure
Wind • Differential heating of land/ocean leads to pressure differences in the atmosphere • Pressure differences are forces that lead to atmospheric motions
Wind (cont.) • Newton’s Laws of Motion • First Law: Objects at rest remain at rest and objects in motion remain in motion, provided no force acts on the object • Second Law: Force equals mass times the acceleration produced F = ma • To determine wind direction and speed, need to know the forces that affect horizontal movement of the air
Wind (cont.) • Forces that lead to the wind • pressure gradient force (PGF) • Coriolis force (C) • centripetal force (c) • gravity (g) -- doesn’t effect horizontal motions • friction (F) Net Force = PGF + C + c + g + F • If these forces add to zero, then (1) The air remains at rest; or, (2) The air remains in motion along a straight path at a constant speed
Wind (cont.) • pressure gradient force (PGF) • Moves air from higher pressure to lower pressure • Coriolis force (C) • Apparent force due to the Earth’s rotation • Acts to turn wind to the right in the Northern Hemisphere • centripetal force (c) • Inward directed, keeps parcels rotating around pressure centers • gravity (g) • Always acts downward; vertical motions only • friction (F) • Acts opposite to the direction of motion; retards motion
Lab 3 Wind
Atmospheric Stability • Stable vs. Unstable • Dry and Moist Adiabatic Processes • Skew-T diagrams
Atmospheric Stability (cont.) • Stable vs. Unstable Stable equilibrium Unstable equilibrium
Atmospheric Stability (cont.) • Adiabatic Processes • Parcel of air expands and cools, or compresses and warms, with no interchange of heat with the surrounding environment • An adiabatic process is reversible • If the parcel doesn’t saturate, cooling or warming occurs at the dry adiabatic lapse rate • Constant in our atmosphere10 oC / km
Atmospheric Stability (cont.) • If the parcel does saturate… • Condensation (RH = 100%), Latent Heat released • Latent Heating offsets some of the cooling • Cooling at slower rate: moist adiabatic lapse rate • Not constant, varies with temperature and moisture Average value ~ 6 oC / km • Not reversible (heat added, moisture probably removed) • Pseudo-adiabatic process
Skew-T diagram • Convenient way to look at the vertical structure of the atmosphere • Determine unreported meteorological quantities • Parcel stability • Observations or model output
Skew-T diagram (cont.) • Basic Definitions • mixing ratio (w) • mass of vapor to mass of dry air • saturation mixing ratio (ws) • maximum for a given T and P • wet-bulb temperature (Tw) • equilibrium T when water evaporates from a wetted-bulb thermometer at a rate where latent heat lost is balanced by flow of heat from surrounding warmer air • potential temperature (2) • temperature of air if brought dry-adiabatically to 1000 mb • vapor pressure (e) • partial pressure of water vapor
Skew-T diagram (cont.) • Basic Definitions (cont.) • virtual temperature (Tv) • temperature dry air at pressure P would have so its density equals that of a moist parcel at T and P • dew point temperature (Td) • temperature of a parcel cooled to saturation at constant P • relative humidity • 100 x (mixing ratio / saturation mixing ratio) • specific humidity (q) • mass of vapor to mass of moist air (nearly the same as mixing ratio) • equivalent temperature (Te) • temperature air would have if all its latent heat were released
Skew-T diagram (cont.) • Basic Definitions (cont.) • equivalent potential temperature (2e) • temperature of a parcel if all moisture condensed out (latent heat released) then the parcel brought dry-adiabatically to 1000 mb • Convective condensation level (CCL) • Height where rising parcel just becomes saturated (condensation starts) • Convective temperature (Tc) • T that must be reached for a surface parcel to rise to CCL • Lifting condensation level (LCL) • Height where parcel becomes saturated by lifting dry-adiabatically • Level of free convection (LFC) • Height where parcel lifted dry-adiabatically until saturated, then moist-adiabaticaly, first becomes warmer than the surrounding air