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Discover the basics of weather and the water cycle with a focus on condensation, dew point, and humidity. Learn about how water vapor affects the atmosphere and various forms of water in the air. Explore relative humidity and measuring techniques.
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Weather and Climate Chapter 2 February, 2011
Bell Work • What is condensation? • What is dew point? • Can you find dew in the air?
What is weather? • Weather • A condition in the atmosphere at a particular time and place
Water in the Air • 1. Water in the air effects weather • 2. Forms of water in the air • A. Gas • As water vapor • B. Solid • Ice (snowflakes) • C. Liquid • rain
Water Cycle • 1. Constant movement of water from land to air and back to land again • 2. Precipitation- • “Let it Snow” lab
“Let it Snow Lab” • Follow Directions • Equipment needed is at the lab stations • Lab Safety?
Graduated Cylinder “Let it Snow”
Beaker “Let it Snow”
“Let it Snow” Rules • 1. No throwing snow • 2. No walking in the snow • 3. No eating snow……….yuck!!!!!!!! • 4. Act like MATURE 7th graders.
Water Cycle Review • 1. Condensation • Water vapor cools and changes back into liquid droplets (how clouds form) • 2. Evaporation • Liquid water changes into water vapor • 3. Transpiration • Plants release water vapor into the air • 4. Precipitation • Rain, snow, sleet, or hail falls from the clouds to Earth’s surface
Humidity • 1. Humidity (pg. 37) in book • Amount of water vapor or moisture in the air • 2. As water evaporates • Humidity of the air increases • 3. Warmer air holds more water vapor • 4. Colder air holds less water vapor
Relative Humidity • 1. Relative Humidity • Amount of moisture the air holds compared to the maximum amount it can hold at that temperature Amount of water in the air ÷ Amount of water the air can hold x 100 • 2. Saturated • When air holds all the water that it can hold at that temperature • Saturated air has a relative humidity of 100%
Water Vapor Versus Temperature • 1. If the temperature stays the same- • Relative humidity changes as water vapor enters and leaves the air • 2. The more water vapor that is in the air • The higher the relative humidity is • 3. Relative humidity is affected by changes in the temperature • If water vapor in the air stays the same, • Relative humidity ↓as temperature ↑ • Relative humidity ↑ as temperature ↓
Bell Work • What is relative humidity? • Does warm air hold (more or less) water vapor than cold air?
1. Psychrometer 2. Instrument used to measure relative humidity Measuring Relative Humidity
1. Sling Psychrometer 2. Has 2 thermometers A. Dry bulb measures temperature Measuring Relative Humidity
Sling Psychrometer B. Wet bulb is covered with a damp cloth C. As air passes over the wet-bulb, the water in the cloth begins to evaporate, and the thermometer begins to cool D. If there is less humidity in the air, the water in the cloth will evaporate more quickly and the temperature will drop E. If there is more humidity in the air, the water in the cloth will evaporate less and there will be little temperature change Measuring Relative Humidity
Measuring Relative Humidity Amount of water in the air ÷ Amount of water the air can hold x 100
1. Psychrometer -a. Find the dry bulb reading -b. Find the wet bulb reading -c. Find the difference -d. Find RH Measuring Relative Humidity
Bell Work • 1. Which
Bell Work • Fill in the blanks • If the humidity is low, a ______amount of water will evaporate from a wet-bulb thermometer and the _____ between the wet-bulb reading and the dry-bulb reading of the psychrometer will be high. • If the dry bulb reads 10 C, and the difference between the thermometers is 8 C, the relative humidity is_______.
1. Process when a gas, like water vapor, becomes a liquid 2. Before condensation can occur, the air must be saturated: it must have a relative humidity of ___100%_____ 3. Condensation occurs when saturated air cools Condensation
Dew Point • 1. Air can become saturated when water vapor is added to the air…… or when it cools to its dew point 2. Dew Point- temperature to which air must cool to become saturated Example……
3. Before it can condense, water vapor must have a surface to condense on Dew Point
Bell Work • What is condensation? • What is dew point? • Can you find dew in the air?
Making Dew • The ice brought the temperature of the can down to dew point and the moisture in the air condensed. • It formed from the water vapor in the air. • The other items in the room were not at dew point • It is the temperature at which dew forms. • Lower
Making Dew 6. All the items would be wet. 7. When you take a hot shower or bath, you add moisture to the air and it condense on the cold mirror. 8.At night, these things cool down to the dew point temperature and the water vapor in the condenses on them. 9. No, not all things can cool down to dew point.
Making Dew 10. Dew does not fall, it forms 11. It evaporates
Making Frost • 1. It formed from water vapor in the air • 2. Yes • 3. The temperature of the can was below freezing point • 4. Both are formed from water vapor in the air. They both form on cool surfaces. • 5.Dew is a liquid. Frost is a solid.
Making Frost 6. No. Frozen dew would look like frozen drops of water. Frost is made of tiny crystals. When dew forms and then freezes, frozen dew is created. Frost is formed when water vapor turns directly into a solid, skipping the liquid phase. (sublimation) 7. Dew is formed when water vapor in the air condenses of surfaces that have cooled down to dew point. Frost is formed at freezing point
Making Frost • 8. Frost forms on objects at Earth’s surface. Snow forms in the atmosphere and falls to the ground. • 9. Snow
Clouds • Clouds- • Are a collection of millions of tiny water droplets or ice crystals