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Chapter 4 Atmospheric Moisture and Precipitation. Visualizing Physical Geography by Alan Strahler and Zeeya Merali. Water and the Hydrosphere. Three States of Water: Solid (ice) Liquid (water) Gas (vapor). Water and the Hydrosphere. Distribution of water in the hydrosphere.
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Chapter 4Atmospheric Moisture and Precipitation Visualizing Physical Geographyby Alan Strahler and Zeeya Merali
Water and the Hydrosphere • Three States of Water: • Solid (ice) • Liquid (water) • Gas (vapor)
Precipitation: Particles of liquid water or ice that fall from the atmosphere and may reach the ground.
Humidity Humidity: the amount of water vapor in the air
Humidity Relative Humidity: compares the amount of water vapor present in the air to the maximum amount that the air can hold at that temperature
Humidity • Relative Humidity changes when: • Atmosphere gains or loses water vapor • Evaporation • Temperature changes • Lower temperature relative humidity rises • Raise temperature relative humidity decreases
Specific Humidity: actual quantity of water held by a parcel of air • Grams of water vapor per kilogram of air (g/kg)
Humidity Dew-point temperature: temperature at which air with a given humidity will reach saturation when cooled without changing its pressure
The Adiabatic Process • Adiabatic Principle: the physical principle that a gas cools as it expands and warms as it is compressed • Change in temperature: • caused only by a change in pressure • not caused by heat flowing in or out of the gas
The Adiabatic Process Atmospheric pressure decreases with altitudeso... As a parcel of air rises pressure on the parcel decreases air expands and cools As a parcel of air descends pressure on the parcel increases air is compressed and warms
Dry adiabatic lapse rate Wet adiabatic lapse rate
Clouds Clouds consist of water droplets, ice crystals, or both Condensation nucleus?
Cloud Families: High clouds, middle clouds, low clouds, clouds of vertical development
Clouds Cumulus Clouds Cumuliform clouds: globular masses of cloud, associated with parcels of rising air
Clouds Stratus Clouds Image ID: wea02050, NOAA's National Weather Service (NWS) Collection Photographer: Ralph F. Kresge http://www.photolib.noaa.gov/htmls/wea02050.htm Stratiform clouds: blanket-like, cover large areas
Clouds Cirrus Clouds Cirrus clouds: high, thin, wispy clouds composed of ice crystals
Clouds Fog is a cloud layer at or close to Earth’s surface • Radiation fog: formed when temperature of the air at ground level falls below dew point • Advection fog: forms when warm moist air moves over a cold surface • Common over oceans (“sea fog”) Image ID: wea03250, NOAA's National Weather Service (NWS) Collection Photographer: LCDR Mark Wetzler, NOAA Corps http://www.photolib.noaa.gov/htmls/wea03250.htm
Precipitation • Rain • Snow • Hail • Ice storm Rain formation in warm clouds
Precipitation • To form precipitation, air must move upwardand chill by adiabatic processes. • Four ways for air to move upward: • Orographic precipitation • Convectional precipitation • Cyclonic precipitation • Convergence
Rain shadow: a belt of dry climate that extends down and beyond the leeward slope of a mountain range
Precipitation Convectional precipitation: precipitation induced when warm, moist air is heated at the ground surface, rises, cools, and condenses to form water droplets, raindrops, and rainfall Lifting condensation level: level at which condensation begins
Precipitation Thunderstorm: intense local storm associated with a tall, dense cumulonimbus cloud in which there are very strong updrafts of air • Conditions: • Warm, moist air • An environmental lapse rate in which temperature decreases more rapidly with altitude than it does for either the dry or wet adiabatic lapse rates
Precipitation Thunderstorm Cell Hailstorm Frequency
Air Quality • Air pollutant: an unwanted substance injected into the atmosphere from the Earth’s surface by either natural or human activities. Includes: • Aerosols • Gases • Particulates Smog?
Air Quality • Acid deposition: sulfur dioxide (SO2) and nitric oxide (NO2) released into the air combines with water to form sulfuric and nitric acids. Acidity of rainwater in U.S., 2005
Air Quality • Effects of acid rain?