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Chapter 6 Atmospheric and Oceanic Circulations. Wind Essentials. Air Pressure and Its Measurement Mercury barometer Aneroid barometer Wind: Description and Measurement Wind Anemometer Wind vane Global Winds . Barometers. Figure 6.2. Air Pressure Readings. Figure 6.3.
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Wind Essentials • Air Pressure and Its Measurement • Mercury barometer • Aneroid barometer • Wind: Description and Measurement • Wind • Anemometer • Wind vane • Global Winds
Barometers Figure 6.2
Air Pressure Readings Figure 6.3
Wind Vane and Anemometermeasures wind direction and speed NEN N NWN NE NW ENE WNW E W ESE WSW SE SW S SWS SES Figure 6.4
Driving Forces within the Atmosphere • Pressure Gradient Force • Coriolis Force • Friction Force
Pressure Gradient : changes in air pressure over a horizontal distancePressure gradient force (PGF): points from higher to lower pressure, perpendicular to isobars.Isobars: lines of equal air pressure. Figure 6.7
Coriolis Force: an apparent force caused by the rotation of the earth;1) deflects to the right (of the movement) in northern hemisphere.2) Maximum in the poles and zero in the equater3) Proportional to the wind speed. Figure 6.9
Geostrophic wind (Vg) • Results from the balance between the PGF and Coriolis force • Flows parallel to straight isobars at a constant speed • Speed in determined by the PGF PGF 1012mb Vg 1016mb COF
Frictional force • Opposite to the wind direction • Slows down the wind speed • Reduces Coriolis force • Creates surface wind (Vs): Flows from high to low pressure across isobars at an angle PGF Vs 1012mb 1016mb COF
Cyclone (low pressure) and Anticyclone (high pressure) In northern hemisphere: Cyclone: wind flows counter-clockwise towards the center across isobars at an angle Anticyclone: wind flows clockwise away from the center across isobars at an angle
Cyclone: air converges on the surface and moves upwards over the center; clouds forms and is likely to be associated with precipitation Anticyclone: air diverges away and subsides over the center; clear sky and sunny Figure 6.8
Atmospheric Patterns of Motion • Primary High-Pressure and Low-Pressure Areas • Upper Atmospheric Circulation • Local Winds • Monsoonal Winds
General circulation: If the earth were not rotating: simple one cell model N. Pole cold H L warm equator
General circulation pattern with rotation H L 60N L 30N H equator H L H
General Atmospheric Circulation Hadley Cell: rises from equator subsides over Subtropical High Figure 6.12
Primary High-Pressure and Low-Pressure Areas • Inter-tropical convergence zone-ITCZ (equator) • Polar High Pressure (poles) • Subtropical high pressure (30N/S) • Subpolar low-pressure cells (60N/S)
June–July ITCZ Figure 6.11
Global wind pattern • Northeast trade wind (between equator and 30N/S) • Westerlies (between 30N/S-60N/S) • Polar northeasterly (between 60N/S-poles)
Global Barometric Pressure -winter Figure 6.10
Global Barometric Pressure-summer Figure 6.10
Semi-permanent system associated with Subtropical High • Bermuda high (Azores high; Atlantic high) • Pacific high (Hawaii high) Figure 6.13
Semi-permanent system associated with Subpolar Low Pressure • Aleutian low • Icelandic low
General Atmospheric Circulation Figure 6.12
Local Winds • Land-sea breezes • Mountain-valley breezes • Katabatic winds
Land-Sea Breezes Sea breeze: wind flows from ocean to land; occurs during the day. Land breeze: wind flows from land to ocean; occurs during the night Figure 6.18
Mountain-Valley Breezes Wind flows from valley to hill during the daytime Wind flows from high to valley during the night Figure 6.19
Monsoonal Winds: reversal of wind directions between seasons Figure 6.20
Oceanic Currents • Surface Currents • Deep Currents
Major Ocean CurrentsGyre: a circular flow pattern occupies the entire ocean basin Figure 6.21
Deep-Ocean Thermohaline Circulation Figure 6.22