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Atmosphere. Part II Moisture. Contents. Hydrological Cycle Three States of water Humidity Adiabatic Processes Condensation Precipitation World distribution of precipitation. Hydrological Cycle.
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Atmosphere Part II Moisture
Contents • Hydrological Cycle • Three States of water • Humidity • Adiabatic Processes • Condensation • Precipitation • World distribution of precipitation
Hydrological Cycle • It is the global circulation of moisture (and heat) between the land and seasurface and the atmosphere.
Hydrological Cycle • It is composed of a series of stores or compartments in which moisture is held in various forms and amounts, and a sequence of transfers and transformations of moisture between and within the different stores. • The most important storage is the ocean, sea, lakes and rivers.
Hydrological Cycle - Terms • Water evaporate from water bodies and land surface. • Atmosphere • Vapour is temporarily locked up as gigantic atmospheric storage. • As temperature drops, it condenses (around condensation nuclei) into different forms of precipitation – solid state (snow, hail), liquid state (rain, drizzles, showers) and semi-gaseous state (fog and mist). • Land surface and vegetation • Snow on mountain tops or in high latitudinal zones, which is stored temporarily until spring thaw. • With temperature rising, it melts into water. • Rain falls through leaves of various vegetation types at different rates through interception and through fall. • Droplets may stay on leafs and stems surface to be evaporated into atmos. Later. • Underground water will be absorbed by roots of vegetation and through transpiration to back into atmos.
Hydrological Cycle - Terms • Underground • When soil is dry (permeable), waterpercolates into soil as infiltration, and is stored below the water table as underground water. • The water flow of this subsurface water is called return flow which reaches rivers as surface water. • If infiltration is checked (few vegetation or saturated soil), water flows on land surface as surface runoff. • Some water will be used for domestic, industrialconsumption and farming. Water quality may be down grade by pollution. • Evapotranspiration brings water from various water storage back to the atmos. again in the form of water vapour.
Three States of water Exchanges of heat energy between 3 states of water is called latent heat.
Humidity • The ability of the air tohold water vapourdepends solely on temperature. • A mass of air is holding the maximum amount of water vapour possible at a given temperature (dew point temperature), it is said to be saturated. • Less than the maximum amount is said to be unsaturated. • Holding more, it is known as supersaturated.
Absolute Humidity • It refers to the actual quantity of moisture present in the air. (gram/m3)
Relative Humidity • The proportion of water vapour present relativeto the maximum quantity, expressed as percentage (%) • The change in relative humidity can be caused by: • Increase water vapour amount (evaporation, transpiration, sea breeze…..) • Changes of temperature.
Relative Humidity • Relative humidity reaches 100%, it is saturated. Further cooling will cause condensation of the excess vapour into liquid form. • The temperature at which condensation takes place is known as dew point temperature.
Adiabatic Processes • Adiabatic means that there is no heat exchange between the air parcel and its surroundings environment. • The process of adiabatic depends on parcels of air rising through the atmosphere to higher elevations. (expansion cooling) • Air may be induced to rise by convection, orographic uplift, turbulence in the air flow, and uplift at frontal surfaces. • The decrease of pressure with height allows the rising air parcel to expand. (loss heat – cooling) • When a air parcel moving to lower level, it gains heat by contraction. • Expansion energy is used up temp. decrease
Dry & Wet Adiabatic Lapse Rate • Dry Adiabatic Lapse Rate (DALR): • Relative Humidity below 100%, adiabatic cooling and warming takes place at a fixed rate (-10oC/1000m) • Saturated Adiabatic Lapse Rate (SALR): • It is lower than the DALR for latent heat was released into air, which offsets the adiabatic temperature loss. -(5~6)oC/1000m)
Adiabatic Lapse Rate and Environmental Lapse Rate • Adiabatic Lapse Rates • The temperature changeswith height of a air parcel which rising or subsiding. • Environmental Lapse Rate • The actual environmental temperature changes with height (-6.5oC/1000m)
Condensation • Condensation is the direct cause of all the various forms of precipitation. • Conditions for condensation: • Air temperature drops to dew point temp. but its volume remains constant • Volume of the air parcel expands. (adiabatic cooling) • Joint functions of above two causes, which reduces the moisture-holding capacity of the air. • Condensation will be accelerated by the presence of condensation nuclei / hygroscopic nuclei (dust, salt, smoke,……)
Forms of Condensation • Dew and Frost • Mist and Fog • Advection Fog • Radiation Fog • Clouds
Dew and Frost • Dew consists of relatively large water droplets which (condense) collect or deposit on cold or cool surface under clam conditions. • Frost consists of ice crystals condense on a cold or cool surface, but the dew point temp. is below 0oC. Water vapour transform to ice crystals directly through sublimation process.
Mist and Fog • Mist and fog are very fine condensed water dropletssuspended in lower level of air. • Visibility • Mist < 1000m • Fog > 1000m • They are usually formed by advection of warm, moist air (advection fog) and by intense radiation at night (radiation fog). • Condensation nuclei are very important for their formation.
Advection Fog • The lower layer of warm air is cooledbelow dew point temp. by contact with cooler air or surface. • Formation conditions • Warm, moist air passes over a cooler land or sea surface horizontally. • Cold and warmocean currents meet each other • Warm moist air (may be from ocean) merges with cool dry air (may be from land), which is also called frontal fog. • It is very common in spring in HK. • It will be vanishduring the day time when appears and temperature rises.
Radiation Fog • Moist air is cooled for heat loss from ground by radiation • It occurs in cold weather when the sky is clear, clam and stable condition. • It is common in winter and in the industrial regions
Clouds • Clouds consist of extremely tiny water droplets or minute ice crystalssuspended in upper level air. • The formation is the same of those of fog. • Favourable formation conditions • Air temperature fall down to dew point for form water droplets or ice crystals. • Presence of condensation nuclei • Water in such minute quantities can remain liquid form far below 0oC without condensation nuclei, it is said supercooled water (-12oC to -30oC).
Classification of Cloud Types • It can be classified on two characteristics: Form (Stratiform and cumuliform) and Altitude. • Stratiform: • They are blanket like, often covering vast areas, but are fairly thin comparison to horizontal dimensions. • Cumuliform: • They tend to display a height as great as their horizontal dimensions. • Cumulus is a white, wool pack cloud mass, showing a flat base and a head of cauliflower. • Cumulonimbus is the thunderstorm cloud mass of enormous size which brings heavy rainfall, thunder and lightning, and gusty winds. It extend from a height of 300 to 600m at the base up to 9000 to 12000m.
Stability and Precipitation • Air Stability • Absolute instability • Conditionally stable (conditionally unstable) • Absolute stability • Highly stable (Inversion) • Formation of precipitation • Forms of precipitation • Types of rainfall • Convectional precipitation • Orographic precipitation • Cyclonic precipitation
Air Stability • It is determinedby the relationship between the environmental lapse rate (ELR) and the dry and saturated adiabatic lapse rate (DALR and SALR). • It is a very important meteorological phenomenon because it influences the amount and the type of condensation (clouds, fog….), together with other related weather phenomena, such as rain and hail…...
Absolute instability • Definition: • When uplifted air is encouraged to rise still further and descending airis continued to sink. • Environmental lapse rate is greater than that of both dry and wet adiabatic lapse rates. ELR > DALR >SALR
Conditionally Stable / Unstable • Definition: • Environmental lapse rate is less than the dry but greater than the saturated adiabatic lapse. • DALR > ELR > SALR
Absolute Stability • Definition: • A vertically displaced air parcel tends to return to itsoriginal position. • DALR > SALR > ELR
Highly Stable Air (Inversion) • Definition: • When the environment air temperature increasewith altitude, temperature inversion exist. • It effectively put a cap on the atmosphere.
Formation of Precipitation • Four conditions for precipitation • a) Cooling air • b) Condensation and cloud formation • c) Accumulation of moisture • d) Growth of cloud droplets • When clouds form, they are 99.9% non-precipitating. • Stages (c) and (d) are fundamental in precipitation production. • Stages (d) is the most critical one in precipitation formation. It is because the water droplets and ice crystals of clouds have to be transformed intoheavier particles. • There are 2 main mechanisms to increase size of cloud droplets for precipitation.
Collision Mechanism • Rising and sinking air motions within cloud carry with different size of droplets of ice-crystals. • The larger droplets tend to catch more of the smaller cloud particles and grow. • When two liquid water droplets collide and join together the process is called coalescence. • The conjoining of two ice crystals is known as aggregation. • An ice crystal collects a water droplet, this process is known as accretion. • Rainfall largely results from coalescence, snowfall from aggregation and hail from accretion.
Ice-crystal / Bergeron Method • Although supercooled water droplets and ice crystals can co-exist within a cloud, they are unstable and liquid water droplets will evaporate. • The evaporated vapour then condenses and freezes onto the ice crystals surface and ice crystals grow into large snowflakes. • In the tropics areas, raindrops grow by collision processes. • Ice-crystals method is responsible for extra-tropical latitudes(strong convection) and heavy rainfall of mid-latitude areas.
Forms of Precipitation • Rain: • When cloud droplets are caused to coalesce into drops too large to remain suspended in the air, rain is formed. • Drizzle: • The diameter of falling rain drops less than 0.5mm. • Sleet: • A mixture of rain and snow • Snow: • Falling ice crystals which grows directly from water vapour to solid form (dew point temp. below 0oC) • Hail: • It consists of rounded lumps of ice, having an internal structure of concentric layers.
Types of rainfall • Convectional Rain • Orographic / Relief Rain • Cyclonic / Frontal Rain