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ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCE AND AIR POLLUTION Chapter 17

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Atmospheric Science and Air Pollution. Chapter 17. Central Case: Charging toward Cleaner Air in London. No city can claim a longer or more notorious history of air pollution than London, England. “killer smog” – 4-12,000 killed (1952) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Atmospheric Science and Air Pollution

ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCE AND AIR POLLUTIONChapter 17

Page 2: Atmospheric Science and Air Pollution

CENTRAL CASE: CHARGING TOWARD CLEANER AIR IN LONDON No city can claim a longer or more notorious

history of air pollution than London, England. “killer smog” – 4-12,000 killed (1952) Smog - (Unhealthy mixture of air pollutants over

urban areas) - cocktail of pollutants of carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, nitrogen oxides, and particulate matter (Solids/liquids suspended in the atmosphere).

REDUCED CONGESTION AND IMPROVED VEHICLE TECHNOLOGY Charge drivers a fee for entering the central city ($15.00)

Traffic congestion decreased by nearly 30% Particulate matter decline by 15.5% Nitrogen oxide emissions decreased by 13.4% Carbon dioxide emissions fell by 16.4%

Page 3: Atmospheric Science and Air Pollution

THE ATM

OSPH

ERE

Tropopause- cap limiting mixing between the troposphere and stratosphere.TR-earthST-ozoneME- little ozoneTH- O2

Page 4: Atmospheric Science and Air Pollution

LAYERS OF THE ATMOSPHERE Troposphere

Bottommost layer Provides us the air Responsible for the planet’s weather ¾ of the atmosphere’s mass because air is denser near Earth’s

surface Stratosphere

Drier and less dense than the troposphere Little vertical mixing (pollutants remain a long time) Ozone layer – reduce UV light penetration

Mesosphere Low air pressure/temperature decrease with altitude

Thermosphere Top layer

Exosphere The region where atoms and molecules escape into space

Page 5: Atmospheric Science and Air Pollution

ATMOSPHERIC PROPERTIES Lower atmosphere is stable in its chemical

composition, but dynamic (strong/powerful) in its movement; air movement within it is due to differences in the physical properties of air masses. These properties are pressure and density, relative humidity, and temperature. 1.Atmospheric pressure

Measures the force per unit area produced by a column of air. Decrease with altitude – fewer molecules are pulled by

gravity Sea level – 1 atm, 14.7 lb/in2, 760 mm Hg, 101.3 kPa, 1013

mb

Page 6: Atmospheric Science and Air Pollution

2.Relative Humidity Ratio of water vapor a given volume of air contains to the

maximum amount it could contain at a given temperature (Increase temperature decrease relative humidity) YouTube Search Powered by iBoss

Relative humidity is the ratio of the current absolute humidity to the highest possible absolute humidity (which depends on the current air temperature). A reading of 100 percent relative humidity means that the air is totally saturated with water vapor and cannot hold any more

Humans are very sensitive to humidity, as the skin relies on the air to get rid of moisture. The process of sweating is your body's attempt to keep cool and maintain its current temperature. If the air is at 100-percent relative humidity, sweat will not evaporate into the air. As a result, we feel much hotter than the actual temperature when the relative humidity is high. If the relative humidity is low, we can feel much cooler than the actual temperature because our sweat evaporates easily, cooling us off.

Page 7: Atmospheric Science and Air Pollution

3.Temperature Energy from the sun heats air in the atmosphere, drives air

movement, helps create seasons, and influences weather and climate 70% of solar energy is absorbed by the atmosphere

Why is solar radiation intensity the highest near the equator and weakest near the poles?• How it strikes the surface of the Earth (angle) and distanced

travelled

Page 8: Atmospheric Science and Air Pollution

Seasons

Page 9: Atmospheric Science and Air Pollution

Convection circulation

Page 10: Atmospheric Science and Air Pollution

Convection circulation

Page 11: Atmospheric Science and Air Pollution

TERMINOLOGY Weather (“what we get”)

the state of the atmosphere with respect to wind, temperature, cloudiness, moisture, pressure, etc.

Climate (“what we expect”) the composite or generally prevailing weather

conditions of a region, as temperature, air pressure, humidity, precipitation, sunshine, cloudiness, and winds, throughout the year, averaged over a series of years.

Page 12: Atmospheric Science and Air Pollution

AIR MASSESWarm Front

Clouds/May produce light rain

Cold FrontClouds/Can produce thunderstorms

Page 13: Atmospheric Science and Air Pollution

HIGH/LOW PRESSURE SYSTEMSHIGH PRESSURE MOVES TO LOW PRESSUREHIGH PRESSURE- FAIR WEATHERLOW PRESSURE- CLOUDS/PRECIPITATION

Page 14: Atmospheric Science and Air Pollution

NO

RMAL CO

ND

ITION

S/THERM

AL IN

VERSION

NC-warm air rises, vertical mixing/dilutes pollution.

TI – resists vertical mixing + remains stable/cause smog/traps pollutants near ground (ex: mountain valleys)

Page 15: Atmospheric Science and Air Pollution

LARGE SCALE CONVECTIVE CELLSHADLEY CELL- CREATES HIGH PRESSURE (DESCENDS)POLAR CELL- CREATES LOW PRESSURE (RISES)FERREL CELL- MOVES HIGH TO LOW

Page 16: Atmospheric Science and Air Pollution
Page 19: Atmospheric Science and Air Pollution

OUTDOOR AIR POLLUTION Air pollutants

Gases and particulate material added to the atmosphere that can affect climate or harm people or other organisms.

Air Pollution Release of air pollutants

Outdoor air pollution (ambient or environment air pollution)

Page 20: Atmospheric Science and Air Pollution

OUTDOOR AIR POLLUTION Natural processes produce a great deal of the

world’s air pollution exacerbated by human activity and land-use policies. Winds

Dust storms Volcanic eruptions

Particulate matter and gases (S02) Sulfur dioxide reacts with water and oxygen

(condensed fine droplets called aerosols) which reflects sunlight back into space causing a drop in temperature

Burning vegetation “slash-and-burn” C0 release into the atmosphere