ch 18 the atmosphere vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone,...

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Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle, transpiration, precipitation, humidity, relative humidity, dew point, barometric pressure, Coriolis effect 18.3 – air mass, front, isobar, climate, topography

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Page 1: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

Ch 18 The AtmosphereVocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect18.2 – water cycle, transpiration, precipitation, humidity, relative humidity, dew point, barometric pressure, Coriolis effect18.3 – air mass, front, isobar, climate, topography

Page 2: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

18.1 Characteristics of the Atmosphere

Layers of the AtmosphereEarth’s atmosphere consists of a

variety of gases.• 78% nitrogen, 21% oxygen, trace

gases

Page 3: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

Layers – differ in temperature, density, and amount of certain gases

Page 4: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

• Troposphere: height 8 km - 18 km

– Closest layer to the crust– Almost all weather occurs in

troposphere– Densest layer because of the weight of

gases above– Temperature decreases (6°C/km) as

altitude increases

Page 5: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

–Tropopause= top of troposphere where temperature stops decreasing

–Temperature inversion= sometimes cold air in troposphere gets trapped beneath warm air; this is one reason for smog pollution

Page 6: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

• Stratosphere: height 8 km – 50 km

–Contains ozone layer – O3 – absorbs sun’s energy (UV)

–Temperature increases as altitude increases

–Very little water vapor – little weather, no storms

Page 7: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

• Mesosphere: height 50 km – 80 km–Temperature decreases as altitude increases

• Thermosphere: height 80 km – 480 km–Very hot layer 980°C; gas molecules are far apart

Page 8: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

• Ionosphere– In between thermosphere and mesosphere, where electrically charged ions are formed

–Electrons in ionosphere reflect radio waves, better at night

Page 9: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

–Auroras, colorful light displays occur: aurora borealis

Page 10: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

• Note: Temperature is the measurement of heat in the atmosphere

• Fahrenheit to Celsius: °C = (5/9)(°F – 32)

• Celsius to Fahrenheit: °F = ((9/5)(°C)) + 32

Page 11: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

Changes in the Atmosphere

When Earth solidified – volcanic eruptions released gases and created the atmosphere. Oxygen was not in this early atmosphere. Bacteria and single-celled organisms lived in this early environment.

Page 12: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

Photosynthesis: Plants use carbon dioxide to produce oxygen while making energy from sunlight.

Respiration: Animals use oxygen to produce carbon dioxide, making a cycle.

Page 13: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

Man-made chemicals can deplete the ozone layer

• 1985 scientists reported a lower concentration of ozone

• Thought to be caused by increase of Chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs); gases used as refrigerants and propellants in spray cans which can break down ozone molecules.

Page 14: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

Greenhouse effect= natural condition where atmospheric gases trap sun’s Energy

Page 15: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

• If too much heat is trapped, the global temperature will rise. Some scientists say that this is happening and damaging the Earth.

Page 16: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

18.2 Water and Wind

Water Cycle• Movement of water in troposphere:

transpiration, evaporation, precipitation, condensation, ground water

Page 17: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

Humidity• the amount of water

vapor in the air–water molecules fit between the air molecules

• the amount of water in the air depends on the temperature

Page 18: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

• at cooler temperatures air molecules move more slowly allowing the water molecules to condense and fall out of the air

• at warmer temperatures air molecules are moving too fast for the water molecules to join up and fall out of the air

Page 19: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

Relative Humidity• measure of the amount of water

vapor that the air is holding compared to the amount that it can hold at a specific temperature

• saturated= when the air contains all the water it can possible hold

–saturated air = 100% relative humidity

Page 20: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

• dew point–the temperature at which air is saturated and condensation takes place

–dew point changes with the amount of moisture in the air

Page 21: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

Condensation• the change from vapor to liquid• for water vapor to condense, air

must be cooled below its dew point• cooling can happen by

–contacting a colder surface–radiating heat–mixing with colder air–expanding when it rises

Page 22: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

• condensing water vapor needs something to hold onto to condense–condensation nuclei – the tiny particles on which water vapor condense•salt – ocean sea spray evaporates

•surfaces and nitrates – natural sources and burning fuel

Page 23: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

• condensed liquid is a fine mist as fog when the warm ground meets the cold air

Page 24: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

Cloud formation• clouds form when water vapor

begins to condense around small particles of dust, salt and smoke in the atmosphere

• Cloud classification: classified mainly by shape and altitude

Page 25: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

3 main types of clouds• Stratus clouds

– appear when layers of air cool below their dew point temperatures

– form at low altitudes: up to 6 km

– smooth even sheets, layered appearance

Page 26: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

–associated with both fair weather and precipitation

–drizzle comes when these clouds are low and gray

–fog= when the air is cooled to its dew point and condenses near the ground it forms a stratus cloud at ground level

Page 27: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

• Cumulus Clouds– fluffy, white clouds

with flat bases– they form when air

currents rise, and water condenses

– various altitudes from 500 m to 12 km

– associated with fair weather and thunderstorms

Page 28: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

• Cirrus Clouds–appear wispy, fibrous or curly

–high altitude: 6,000 – 11,000 km

–contain ice crystals–associated with fair weather and approaching storms

Page 29: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,
Page 30: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

Other clouds are combinations of these 3 main types

• Nimbus Clouds–added to one of the 3 main clouds

–dark clouds associated with precipitation

–they are so full of water that no sunlight penetrates them

Page 31: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

Rain capacity• when water droplets combine

and reach the size of 0.2 mm they become too heavy and fall out of suspension in the cloud

Page 32: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

Air Pressure - (barometric pressure or atmospheric pressure)

• pressure from air in atmosphere above measuring instrument

• measured in inches mercury, millimeters mercury or hectapasals

• Barometers– Mercury barometer = more accurate– Aneroid barometer = more portable;

no liquid

Page 33: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,
Page 34: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

• overall pressure depends on temperature, density, and amount of water vapor in air– temperature = pressure– temperature = pressure– density = pressure– density = pressure– water vapor = pressure– water vapor = pressure

Page 35: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

• high pressure means descending air–when the air can’t rise, clouds can’t form = nice weather

• low pressure means clouds = bad weather

Page 36: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

Winds• Pressure gradient: the differences

in pressure that create winds • Air is pushed from high-pressure to

low-pressure• So, winds result from the uneven

heating of the atmosphere• warm air rises faster creating a

pressure gradient force

Page 37: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

Differences in pressure causes winds

Page 38: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

• heated island surrounded by cooler water becomes a region of low pressure, causing winds to blow toward the land

Page 39: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

Land breeze occurs at night

Page 40: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

• Winds are named for the direction that they come from: North winds come from the north.

Page 41: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

• The Coriolis Effect – change in movement due to rotation

• Winds normally blow from high-pressure areas to low-pressure areas. However, the Earth is rotating as well. Due to this effect, the path of the wind does not move in a straight line relative to land. Winds are turned to the right (counter clockwise) in the North Hemisphere and to the left (clockwise) in the Southern Hemisphere.

Page 42: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,
Page 43: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,
Page 44: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

• Northern Hemisphere: winds flow clockwise around highs and counterclockwise around lows

Page 45: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

Circulation Cells, Pressure Belts, and Wind• Due to Coriolis effect, the earth’s rotation

affects direction of wind• Earth’s rotation= wind starts= wind blows=

• The winds between the pressure zones are named from the directions that they flow from– North + coriolus effect= northeasterlies– South + coriolus effect=

southwesterlies

animation

Page 46: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

• Both the Northern and Southern Hemisphere have three wind belts: Polar Easterlies, Westerlies, and tradewinds. The winds move in vertical loops called cells.– Equator has a low-pressure belt,

because hot air rises.– 30° N latitude has a high-pressure

belt– 60° N latitude has a low-pressure

belt

Page 47: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,
Page 48: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

Trade winds: Found between the equator and 30° N and 30° S

• Warm and steady in both direction and speed

Prevailing winds: Winds that blow from the same direction on the average

Page 49: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

18.3 Weather and Climate

Weather• present state of the atmosphere

and describes current conditions• caused by the interaction of air,

water, and sun• National Weather Service depends

upon meteorologists and satellites

Page 50: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

Meteorologist• Study the weather; specifically

temperature, air pressure, winds, humidity, and precipitation using machines such as satellites, Doppler radar, computers, and instruments attached to weather balloons

• Information weather maps predictions

Page 51: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

Air Masses• a large body of air with uniform

temperature and moisture content• has the same properties as the

surface over which it develops–cold usually forms in high altitude

–hot usually forms near tropics–wet usually forms over an ocean–dry usually forms over land

Page 52: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

N. American air masses

Page 53: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

Fronts• A front is the boundary between

air masses of different densities• Weather occurs at fronts due to

the interaction of the air masses• Air moves from high pressure

systems to low pressure systems

Page 54: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

• As the cold air converges into the low pressure system, it pushes the warmer, less dense air upward

• As the warm air rises it cools and reaches its dew point and the water vapor condenses forming clouds

Page 55: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

• When a cold front meets a warm front the air does not mix–High pressure - cold air moves under the warm air

–Warm air is pushed higher–Wind begins–Coriolis effect turns the wind and makes it a circle counter clockwise around the low pressure area

Page 56: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

• Fronts usually bring a change in temperature and always bring a change in wind direction

• Most changes in weather occur at the 4 major front types

• Front symbols

Page 57: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,
Page 58: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

Cold front• Cold air mass advances and forces

warmer air mass to rise• Rapid speed of advance causes

steeper slopes than warm fronts• Can causes a narrow area of high

winds, violent thunderstorms, and sometimes tornadoes

Page 59: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

Cold Front

Page 60: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

Warm front• Less dense, warm air mass slides

over a departing cold air mass• Gentle sloping front because of

slower movement• As warm mass rises, it cools and

precipitation can occur over a large area for one to two days

Page 61: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

Warm Front

Page 62: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

Stationary front• When neither air mass is being

displaced, the front does not move• Pressure differences cause a warm

front or cold front to stop moving for several days

• Light wind and precipitation across the front for one to two days

Page 63: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

Occluded front: 3 air masses coming together: 2 types

• Occurs when cold, cool, and warm air come together

• Cold occlusion: a cold front pushes under a cool front and an overlying warm front

Page 64: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

• Warm occlusion: a cool front slides in between a cold front and an overlying warm front

• Both cause warmer air to rise; strong winds and heavy precipitation

Page 65: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

Occluded Front

Page 66: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

Precipitation• Rain, sleet, snow, hail• When air rises high enough and

in large enough quantities, precipitation occurs

• Warmer air holds more precipitation

• Higher the air rises, the more moisture it can drop

Page 67: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

• Rainy areas of the Earth (NW coast of USA) –windward side of mountain range

Page 68: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

–storm areas•hurricanes, typhoons, low pressure zones, and fronts

•warm air rises, cools, and drops water

• areas favored by the global wind belts at the equator where air has no choice but to rise causing daily thunderstorms

Page 69: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

Thunderstorms• Heavy rain, lighting flashes,

thunder and sometimes hail• Occur inside warm, moist air

masses and at fronts

Page 70: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

• Warm, moist air moves upward rapidly, cools, condenses, and forms cumulonimbus clouds up to 10 km high–Water droplets fall, collecting other drops

–The falling rain causes downdrafts which form strong winds

Page 71: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

• Lightning= a large spark caused by a rapid uplift of air resulting in a build up of electrical charges (+ & -); can travel easily through water

• Thunder–Results from the rapid heating of the air around the bolt of lightning then its cooling

–Moving molecules cause sound waves: 25° C to 30,000° C

Page 72: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,
Page 73: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

Tornadoes• Violent whirling wind that moves

in a narrow path over land and through the clouds

• Most form along fronts in severe thunderstorms as warm air rises, and begins to rotate

Page 74: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

• Wind shears: differences in wind direction and speed: causes funneling

• Most common in the United States during spring and early summer

• Begins as a funnel cloud of water droplets

Page 76: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

Hurricanes• A large, swirling, low pressure

system that forms over tropical oceans; also called cyclones (Indian Ocean) and typhoons in (Pacific)

Page 77: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

• Warm ocean water evaporates; warm water vapor rises causing tropical depressions (low-pressure area) that can gain strength

• As water vapor rises, it condenses into clouds… releases energy

Page 78: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

Hurricane

Page 79: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

• Occur when SE tradewinds meet up with NE tradewinds in North Atlantic

• Start in the north hemisphere between 5° and 20° latitude; move slowly and are powerful

Page 80: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

Weather Maps• Map showing weather conditions

including precipitation, wind speed, and cloud coverage.

Page 81: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

Isotherm• Line that indicate temperature• Connects points of the same

temperature–“iso” = same–“therm” = temperature

Page 82: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,
Page 83: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

Isobar• Line drawn to connect points of

equal atmospheric pressure• You can tell how fast the wind is

blowing in an area by how close the isobars are; closer isobars = faster winds

Page 84: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,
Page 86: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

• When isobars create a closed loop, this is the pressure center–Remember lows usually mean clouds and precipitation

–Highs mean fair weather

Page 87: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

Climate = the average weather of a region measured over years

Page 88: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

• The Sun • The sun is the driving force

behind weather… it supplies the energy for air and water to heat and move which causes winds

• Winds move in attempt to equalize pressure and temperature… but cause changing weather.

Page 89: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

• Temperatures are closer to the equator because of the direction of sunlight

Page 90: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

• Earth’s tilt and rotation cause the seasons–Northern hemisphere has summer when it is tilted towards the sun… Southern hemisphere is on opposite seasons

Page 91: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,
Page 92: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,
Page 93: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

– June 21 summer solstice – longest day

–December 21 winter solstice – shortest day

–March 21 vernal (spring) equinox – day and night are equal

–September 22 autumnal (fall) equinox – day and night are equal

Page 94: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

Topography affects climate• Hills, mountains, valleys etc affect

pressure systems and climate• Air masses must rise to pass over

mountains… it cools, precipitation falls on windward side.

• Deserts often form on the leeward side of a high mountain range

Page 95: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,
Page 96: Ch 18 The Atmosphere Vocab: 18.1 – troposphere, temperature inversion, stratosphere, ozone, mesosphere, thermosphere, greenhouse effect 18.2 – water cycle,

• Broad flat surfaces (Great Plains) have winds and air masses converge and create thunderstorms and tornadoes