380 likes | 1.11k Views
Atmospheric Stability and Cloud Formation. RECAP. Mechanical equilibrium : stable, unstable, neutral. Adiabatic expansion/compression : no heat exchange. Adiabatic lapse rate Dry adiabatic lapse rate ~ 10 K/km Moist adiabatic lapse rate ~ 6 K/km Remember: Dry > Moist always
E N D
RECAP • Mechanical equilibrium: stable, unstable, neutral. • Adiabatic expansion/compression: no heat exchange. • Adiabatic lapse rate • Dry adiabatic lapse rate ~ 10 K/km • Moist adiabatic lapse rate ~ 6 K/km • Remember: Dry > Moist always • Environmental lapse rate. • Atmospheric stability: • Absolutely stable atmosphere • Absolutely unstable atmosphere • Neutrally stable atmosphere • Conditionally unstable atmosphere
Midchapter summary • The air temperature in a rising parcel of unsaturated air decreases at the dry adiabatic rate, while the air temperature in a rising parcel of saturated air decreases at the moist adiabatic rate. • The dry adiabatic rate and moist adiabatic rate of cooling are different due to the fact that latent heat is released in a rising parcel of saturated air. • In a stable atmosphere, a lifted parcel of air will be cooler (heavier) than the air surrounding it, and will tend to sink back to its original position. • In an unstable atmosphere, a lifted parcel of air will be warmer (lighter) than the air surrounding it, and will continue to rise upward, away from its original position. • The atmosphere becomes more stable (stabilizes) as the surface air cools and/or the air aloft warms. • The atmosphere becomes more unstable (destabilizes) as the surface air warms and/or the air aloft cools. • Layered clouds tend to form in a stable atmosphere, while cumuliform clouds form in an unstable atmosphere.
Sample test questions • If the environmental lapse rate is 5 deg C per 1000 m and the temperature at the earth's surface is 25 deg C, then the air temperature at 2000 m above the ground is: • a. 25 deg C • b. 35 deg C • c. 20 deg C • d. 15 deg C • e. 10 deg C
Sample test questions • Take the dry adiabatic lapse rate to be 10 deg C per 1000 m. A radiosonde has measured the temperature of the atmosphere to be 30 deg C on the ground and 15 deg C at an altitude of 1000 m. What can you say about the stability of the atmosphere? • The atmosphere is absolutely unstable • The atmosphere is conditionally unstable • The atmosphere is absolutely stable • The atmosphere is neutrally stable • This question cannot be answered without knowing the moist adiabatic lapse rate
How does the Stability of the Atmosphere Change During the Day? • Daytime: • The sun heats the ground. • The boundary layer is heated from below. • The environmental lapse rate is steep. • The atmosphere can become unstable. • Morning and evening hours: • Radiation cooling results in temperature inversion. • The boundary layer is cooler than the air above. • The environmental lapse rate becomes less steep. • The atmosphere is stable.
Air Stability DAY NIGHT Adiabatic lapse rate Environmental lapse rate Solar radiation Altitude IR cooling 20 30 The ground is warm The ground is cool Temperature [C]
Formation of Convective Clouds The surface air temperature is 35 C and the dew point is 25 C
Stability and cloud thickness • A conditionally unstable atmosphere allows for saturated air to keep propagating upwards
STABLE UNSTABLE