Fundamental Force Balances

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 8 Air pressure and winds.
Advertisements

Chapter 8 (part II). Forces that Influence Winds Pressure Gradient Force: difference in pressure over distance Directed perpendicular to isobars from.
Class #5: Air pressure and winds Chapter 8 1Class #5 Tuesday, July 13, 2010.
The Air we breath is composed of……. The gases above they all have some weight and since then they all exert a force, or pressure, on our bodies = athmospheric.
Chapter 4. Atmospheric Pressure and Wind
Air Pressure and Winds III
NATS Lecture 11 Newton’s Laws of Motion Upper-Air Winds.
San Jose State University
AtmosphericCirculation Patterns Atmospheric Circulation Patterns Ally, Molly, Joe Atmosphere Jigsaw.
Meteo 3: Chapter 7 Analyzing weather above Earth’s surface Read: pp (ignore confluence)
Atmospheric Motion ENVI 1400: Lecture 3.
Natural Environments: The Atmosphere
Air movement ENVS what makes air move ? air moves from areas of high atmospheric pressure to areas of low atmospheric pressure low pressure.
Chapter 10: Atmospheric Dynamics
What Makes the Wind Blow? ATS 351 Lecture 8 October 26, 2009.
STORM SURGE. Composed of several attributes: A)Barometric – Coastal water response to low pressure at center of storm B) Wind stress – frictional drag.
AOS101 Lecture 10. A severe thunderstorm is defined as a thunderstorm that produces - Hail of 1 inch diameter (in central US) or larger and/or wind gusts.
Warning! In this unit, we switch from thinking in 1-D to 3-D on a rotating sphere Intuition from daily life doesn’t work nearly as well for this material!
Understanding Air Pressure
Atmospheric Force Balances
Geostrophic Balance The “Geostrophic wind” is flow in a straight line in which the pressure gradient force balances the Coriolis force. Lower Pressure.
General Circulation & Thermal Wind
Things to look for on the weather maps Visible and IR satellite images (& radar too): Look at cloud movements and locations - do they correlate with what.
Force Balance (Chap. 6) ATM100. Topics of the Day ◦ Review Test 1 ◦ Newton’s Laws of Motion ◦ Review of vectors and forces ◦ Forces that act to move the.
Atmospheric Motions & Climate
Atmospheric Forces Nick Bassill April 8 th Why Are Forces Important? When we speak of “forces,” we’re really describing why the air in the atmosphere.
Chapter 6 Atmospheric Forces and Wind
Chapter 7 cover. Figure 7.1 Figure 7.2 Figure mb/km 115G150 knots.
Lecture 14 4 February 2005 Atmospheric and Oceanic Circulations (continued) Chapter 6.
Thickness and Thermal Wind /aos101/wk12.html /aos101/wk12.html.
Warm Up 3/20/08 1) What source of energy fuels the wind? 2) Which of the following statements about air pressure is NOT true? a. Air pressure is exerted.
Air Pressure and Winds. Atmospheric Pressure  What causes air pressure to change in the horizontal?  Why does the air pressure change at the surface?
Chapter 6: Air Pressure and Winds Atmospheric pressure Atmospheric pressure Measuring air pressure Measuring air pressure Surface and upper-air charts.
NATS 101 Section 13: Lecture 15 Why does the wind blow? Part I.
Atmospheric Motion SOEE1400: Lecture 7. Plan of lecture 1.Forces on the air 2.Pressure gradient force 3.Coriolis force 4.Geostrophic wind 5.Effects of.
AOSC 200 Lesson 6. p. 159 Fig. 6.3 Newton’s Laws First Law (Law of Inertia): A body at rest tends to stay at rest while a body in motion tends to.
Wind Wind is the general horizontal motion of air from one location to another based on differences in air pressure Wind is the general horizontal motion.
AOS 100: Weather and Climate Instructor: Nick Bassill Class TA: Courtney Obergfell.
The Wind: PGF Pressure gradient force is what sets air in motion
CHAPTER 6 AIR PRESSURE AND WINDS. Understanding Air Pressure - Air pressure is a very abstract term. We cannot actually see it or touch it. --- It is.
Lecture 7 Forces (gravity, pressure gradient force)
A stable atmosphere. An absolutely stable atmosphere exists when a rising air parcel is colder and heavier (i.e., more dense) than the air surrounding.
There are 3 major forces that determine how strongly the wind will blow and in what direction: 1. Pressure Gradient Force ◦ push from high pressure to.
Isobars and wind barbs sea level pressure. factors affecting wind wind is the result of horizontal differences in pressure air flows from higher to lower.
ATM OCN Fall ATM OCN Fall 1999 LECTURE 17 THE THEORY OF WINDS: PART II - FUNDAMENTAL FORCES A. INTRODUCTION –How do winds originate? –What.
Air Pressure and Winds II. RECAP Ideal gas law: how the pressure, the temperature and the density of an ideal gas relay to each other. Pressure and pressure.
Weather, Climate and Society Newton’s Laws of Motion Upper-Air Winds.
GRAVITY. INTRODUCTION Friction explains why a book comes to a stop when it is pushed. But why does a book fall to the ground if you lift it and let it.
PRESSURE & WIND, GENERAL CIRCULATION, JET STREAMS.
Dynamics I: Basic forces
Thickness and Thermal Wind
Winds and Forces Atmospheric Sciences 101.
Winds and Forces Atmospheric Sciences 101.
ATOC 4720 class32 1. Forces 2. The horizontal equation of motion.
19.1 Understanding Air Pressure & Wind
PRESSURE & WIND, GENERAL CIRCULATION, JET STREAMS
Thickness and Thermal Wind
Chapter 6: Air Pressure and Winds
Connecting Motion with Forces
Atmospheric Forces Wind Relationships.
NATS 101 Lecture 16 Newton’s Laws of Motion Upper-Air Winds
WIND.
NATS Lecture 11 Newton’s Laws of Motion Upper-Air Winds
Temperature Conversion
Lift The dynamic fluid force component that acts perpendicular to the relative motion of the object.
NATS Lecture 11 Newton’s Laws of Motion Upper-Air Winds
NATS Lecture 11 Newton’s Laws of Motion Upper-Air Winds
Isobars and wind barbs sea level pressure.
NATS 101 Lecture 16 Newton’s Laws of Motion Upper-Air Winds
Intro. to Atmospheric Sciences Plymouth State University
Presentation transcript:

Fundamental Force Balances AOS 101 Section 301 April 6th, 2009

Why Talk About Forces? All motion in the atmosphere (really, all motion anywhere) is due to the interaction of forces Luckily for forecasters, the motion in the atmosphere is due to a few specific forces, and fundamental balances between those forces

Fundamental Forces The fundamental forces in the atmosphere are: Pressure-gradient force (PGF) Coriolis force (COR) Friction force (FR) Each of these forces has an important role to play in the motion of the air (wind), and observed wind is a result of various balances between them

Pressure-Gradient Force “Pressure” = Atmospheric pressure “Gradient” = Change in some quantity over some distance A strong gradient in pressure implies that pressure changes greatly over a short distance This pressure gradient creates a force:

Pressure-Gradient Force A divider is placed in a tank of water, separating a deep column of water from a shallow column of water.

Pressure-Gradient Force A divider is placed in a tank of water, separating a deep column of water from a shallow column of water. The divider is lifted …

Pressure-Gradient Force A divider is placed in a tank of water, separating a deep column of water from a shallow column of water. The divider is lifted … The deep column of water pushes into the area inhabited by the shallow column.

Pressure-Gradient Force A divider is placed in a tank of water, separating a deep column of water from a shallow column of water. The divider is lifted … The deep column of water pushes into the area inhabited by the shallow column. Motion in the tank continues until the water level is flat.

Pressure-Gradient Force Recall that pressure is equal to the weight of fluid above you. Let’s look at this example again, but this time we look at it from the perspective of being at the bottom of the tank:

Pressure-Gradient Force

Pressure-Gradient Force At the bottom of the tank, the deep column exerts greater pressure than the shallow column H L

Pressure-Gradient Force At the bottom of the tank, the deep column exerts greater pressure than the shallow column The divider is lifted… H L

Pressure-Gradient Force At the bottom of the tank, the deep column exerts greater pressure than the shallow column The divider is lifted… The deep column of water pushes into the area inhabited by the shallow column. H L

Pressure-Gradient Force At the bottom of the tank, the deep column exerts greater pressure than the shallow column The divider is lifted… The deep column of water pushes into the area inhabited by the shallow column. Motion in the tank continues until the water level is flat. At this point, there is the same weight of fluid above you at all points along the bottom of the tank – the pressure is equal everywhere, so there is no pressure gradient. Therefore, there is no pressure-gradient force.

Pressure-Gradient Force The pressure-gradient force acts by pushing the fluid on the “high pressure side” stronger than the fluid is pushed on the “low pressure side” The fluid is forced to move from the area of excess fluid (area of high pressure) to the area with a deficit of fluid (area of low pressure

Pressure-Gradient Force H

Pressure-Gradient Force H

Pressure Gradient

Wind Speed

Coriolis Force The Coriolis force is an apparent force that is caused by the fact that we are on a rotating planet We cannot see the planet rotating, so when something is moving, we perceive it as being deflected to the right of its intended trajectory

Imagine Dallas, TX fires an ICBM nuclear missile at Winnipeg, Manitoba…

Imagine Dallas, TX fires an ICBM nuclear missile at Winnipeg, Manitoba… Missile starts at Dallas, which is at a latitude of 37.28 N, rotates with the Earth at a speed of 465.11 m/s.

Imagine Dallas, TX fires an ICBM nuclear missile at Winnipeg, Manitoba… Missile starts at Dallas, which is at a latitude of 37.28 N, rotates with the Earth at a speed of 465.11 m/s. Missile travels toward Winnepeg which, at a latitude of 52.00 N, rotates with the Earth at a speed of 286.35 m/s. The missile will conserve its angular momentum as it travels north, meaning it will travel around the Earth at the speed of the Earth’s rotation at Dallas, TX

Imagine Dallas, TX fires an ICBM nuclear missile at Winnipeg, Manitoba… Missile starts at Dallas, which is at a latitude of 37.28 N, rotates with the Earth at a speed of 465.11 m/s. Missile travels toward Winnepeg which, at a latitude of 52.00 N, rotates with the Earth at a speed of 286.35 m/s. The missile will conserve its angular momentum as it travels north, meaning it will travel around the Earth at the speed of the Earth’s rotation at Dallas, TX Since the Earth rotates slower the farther north you go, the missile appears to deflect to the right of its intended target

Imagine Dallas, TX fires an ICBM nuclear missile at Winnipeg, Manitoba… Missile starts at Dallas, which is at a latitude of 37.28 N, rotates with the Earth at a speed of 465.11 m/s. Missile travels toward Winnepeg which, at a latitude of 52.00 N, rotates with the Earth at a speed of 286.35 m/s. The missile will conserve its angular momentum as it travels north, meaning it will travel around the Earth at the speed of the Earth’s rotation at Dallas, TX Since the Earth rotates slower the farther north you go, the missile appears to deflect to the right of its intended target Missile lands north of Ottawa.

Coriolis Force IMPORTANT NOTE: While the example given is only valid for an object which moves north or south, the Coriolis force will act on an object moving in any direction The Coriolis force will act to deflect the object to the right in the northern hemisphere, and to the left in the southern hemisphere

Geostrophic Balance The pressure-gradient force and the Coriolis force can oppose each other, and reach a force balance Due to Newton’s laws of motion, an object which experiences no net force will move at constant velocity – without accelerating The balance between the pressure-gradient force and the Coriolis force is known as geostrophic balance

Geostrophic Balance L H

Geostrophic Balance L PGF H

Geostrophic Balance L PGF CF H

Geostrophic Balance L PGF wind CF H

Geostrophic Balance L PGF CF wind H The wind defined by geostrophic balance, known as the “geostrophic wind”, moves parallel to lines of constant pressure, with low pressure on the left

Geostrophic Balance L H PGF CF wind H The wind defined by geostrophic balance, known as the “geostrophic wind”, moves parallel to lines of constant pressure, with low pressure on the left Where the pressure-gradient is small, the PGF is also small, resulting in a weak wind. L PGF wind CF H

Geostrophic Balance L H PGF CF wind H The wind defined by geostrophic balance, known as the “geostrophic wind”, moves parallel to lines of constant pressure, with low pressure on the left Where the pressure-gradient is small, the PGF is also small, resulting in a weak wind. Where the pressure-gradient is large, the PGF is also large, resulting in a strong wind. L PGF wind CF H

H CF CF CF CF PGF PGF PGF PGF L

Height vs Pressure Levels Meteorologists typically look at data on levels of constant pressure It would be impossible to see the pressure-gradient, and therefore the PGF, on such a map However, there is a relationship between pressure and height

Height vs Pressure Levels 2 km P3 H L Z P4 Y P5 Pressure surfaces in cross-section Pressure-gradient at 2 km X X Because pressure is largest at the ground and decreases with height, a region of low pressure is a region where a given value of pressure is closer to the ground

Height vs Pressure Levels 2 km 1 km 3 km H 2 km P3 H L Z Y L 1 km Height surfaces in cross-section Height-gradient at P3 X X Low pressures on a height-surface are the same as low heights on a pressure surface, and high pressures on a height-surface are the same as high heights on a pressure surface.

Height vs Pressure Levels So the PGF is visible on a map of constant pressure as a gradient in height, with the force pointing from high heights to low heights: H

Friction Friction affects geostrophic balance by putting a drag-force on the air: friction always acts in the direction opposite the direction of the wind: FR wind

Friction This throws the wind out of geostrophic balance – there is now a net force acting on the wind in the direction opposite its motion PGF FR wind CF

Friction A new balance can be achieved if the wind tilts slightly toward lower heights/pressure, allowing the CF to balance the FR: PGF wind FR CF

Friction In regions where friction is important, we expect the winds to point slightly toward lower pressure PGF wind FR CF

Winds Near Surface

Winds Away From Surface