Unit 3: Meteorology

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polar climate

NO summer; tundra (frozen plain); ice caps; warmest month averages below 10 degrees C = 50 degrees F

dark objects

____ _____ like the asphalt can absorb a lot of energy

light objects

____ _____ reflect energy

cyclone

a rotating column of low pressure air

cumulonimbus

a thunderstorm cloud

waterspout

a weak tornado that forms over water

mesosphere

above the stratosphere; where temperatures decrease with altitude, reaching the lowest point at the top of the mesosphere; air pressure is extremely low; protects earth from meteors; coldest region of atmosphere

vegetation

affects temperatures and humidity

precipitation

amount

el nino

an episode of ocean warming that affects the eastern tropical pacific; occur every 3 to 7 years -triggered when surface temps in the eastern pacific are colder than average

land breeze

at night, air over land cools and moves out over water

mountain breeze

at night, cooled air along mountain slopes moves downward

water bodies

changes humidity and temperatures

wind

circulates the different temperatures

fog

clouds at the ground level that reduce visibility

greater

cold air has _______ pressure than warm air, which is less dense.

cold front

cold air moving into warm air

occluded front

combo of warm/cold air; quick combo; produces violent weather

stationary front

combo of warm/cold air; stays still; two masses meet and is slow moving

dry climate

deserts, dry plains, precipitation is less than evaporation -arid or desert -semi-arid or stepp

wind and water currents

distribute heat and moisture

valley breeze

during the day, heated air along mountain slopes rises

sea breeze

during the day, heated air over land rises, allowing cooler air to move in from over water

humid mid-lattitude (severe winters)

farther from the equator; extreme cold winters average below -3 degrees C = 27 degrees F

tropical

form near equator = WARM

polar

form near poles = COLD

continental

forms over land = DRY

maritime

forms over water = WET

altitude

higher= cooler

barometer

instrument measured in millibars (mb)

anemometer

instrument used to measure wind speed

faster

land heats up _____ than water

stratosphere

layer above troposphere; gases don't mix much; highest part of stratosphere is warmer than lower levels; contains ozone layer; where jets and manned balloons have gone

low pressure

less dense= bad weather; cyclone wind blows counter clockwise

isobars

lines of equal pressure

troposphere

lowest layer of atmosphere; directly above the ground; blankets earth's surface and contains the oxygen we need to live; most weather occurs here; convection currents

koppen system

mean (average) monthly and annual values of temperature and precipitation

high pressure

more dense= good weather; anticyclone that wind blows clockwise

highlands

mountain regions -climate is changed by altitude -no defined temperature/precip -cooler and wetter than it's nearby regions

humid tropical

near the equator; tropical, rainy, warm, NO WINTER, above 18 degrees C = 64 degrees F -wet tropics -tropical wet and dry

funnel cloud

rotating cone shaped column of air extending downward from the base of thunderstorm

local winds

small-scale winds produced by a locally generated pressure gradient -causes: either by topographic effects or by variations in surface composition-land and water- in the immediate area

primary driver

sun's energy cause of areas of high and low pressure

prevailing westerlies/jet stream

the US is affected by this; weather moves from the west to the east

humidity

the amount of water vapor in the air

climate

the average weather conditions of an area-daily and seasonal weather events over an extended period of time

eye

the center of a hurricane

ozone layer

the concentration of ozone in stratosphere; 1. ozone is made of 3 oxygen atoms (O3) 2. protects the surface from Sun's UV rays 3. humans are causing ozone depletion

weather

the current atmospheric conditions

storm surge

the dome of water that sweeps across the coast when the center of a hurricane moves over land

solar energy/solar radiation/electromagnetic waves

the energy from the sun

air pressure

the force exerted by air on the area below it

sun's rays

the other things that influences the amount of energy is the angle of the ____ _____. At the equator, the rays are more direct than at other locations.

atmosphere

the thin layer of gases that surrounds the earth

radiation

the transfer of energy through space

convection

the transfer of heat by the movement of currents within a fluid

conduction

the transfer of heat directly between two objects that are in contact with one another

sun and moisture

the two things weather is driven by

hygrometer, barometer, thermometer

the type of instruments that are used to measure the weather of a place

thunderstorms and tornadoes

these are common along cold fronts in the summer

snowstorms

these are common along cold fronts in the winter

thermosphere

top layer; air is very thin, and the thermosphere has only a tiny fraction of the atmosphere's mass; temperature is very high; temps get up to 2000 degrees C; air molecules are 1 km apart

warning

type of tornado announcement issued when a tornado has been sighted

watch

type of tornado announcement issued when there is a possibility of a storm/tornado developing in your area

warm front

warm air is moving into cold air

humid mid-lattitude (mild winter)

warm temps, rainy, mild winters, typically does not go below -3 degrees C = 27 degrees F

air masses

weather conditions change from day to day because of the movement of ___ _____.; large body of air formed in a location with shared temps/ moisture

climate zones

what the earth is divided into based on the amount of radiant energy received by regions of the earth

front

when the masses do not mix, but instead one mass, pushes the other along

prevailing wind

when the wind consistently blows more often from one direction than from any other

high & low

winds always move from areas of _____ pressure into areas of ____ pressure.

magnetosphere

1. earth's magnet field 2. causes aurora borealis (northern lights)

ionosphere

1. lower part of thermosphere 2. radio waves bounce back to earth's surface

exosphere

1. upper part of thermosphere 2. artificial satellites orbit here 3. end of the atmosphere

oxygen

21% of this is in the atmosphere

nitrogen

78% of this is in the atmosphere; most abundant

tornado

-a violent windstorm in the form of a rotating column of air -measured with the fujita scale -winds can reach speeds of 300 mph -each year, there is an average of 1,000 of these in the US -causes: the thunderstorms being extremely large, unstable and with wind shear in the lower region of the atmosphere -effects: rotating wall cloud formed at base of cloud; wind direction and speed change; spiral

thunderstorm

-generates lightening and thunder -the type of storm usually associated with tornadoes -they form when warm, humid air rises in an unstable environment -cumulonimbus cloud -causes: lower pressure zone; instability of air current and moisture formed in and around rain clouds, generates electrical charges -effects: tornadoes, flash-floods; wildfires; death; fire; mudslides; damage; power outages -STAGES: 1. cumulus- updrafts of warm air cause the cloud to grow upward 2. mature- heavy precipitation falls 3. dissipating- the storm cools and dies down

hurricane

-other names are tropical cyclone and typhoon -a storm that is described as a tropical cyclonic storm over water; -cause: warm water and moist, warm air -effect: storm surge, strong wind, inland flooding and tornadoes -measured with the saffir-simpson scale -can be 600 miles across -usually lasts over a week -moves 10-20 mph over the open ocean

blizzard

-winter storm -temps usually below 20 degrees F -winds are at least 35 mph -the snowiest large city in the US is Rochester, New York...... it gets average of 94 inches of snow each year -causes: cold air at the surface; lots of moisture; warm air must rise over cool air -effects: difficult to see or drive; sicknesses; breathing difficulty, hypothermia, and frostbite; destruction of land, & possibly crops

other gases

1% of this is in the atmosphere


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