Topic 10 Ice and Fog GEOL 2503 Introduction to Oceanography.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
What is Weather?.
Advertisements

Water in the Atmosphere
Clouds and Precipitation
In this presentation you will: explore the stages of the water cycle
Notes Chapter Air pressure is the force of air molecules pushing on an area. The greater the force the higher the air pressure because air.
Unit 1: Water Systems on Earth Chapter 1
Unit 4-3: Precipitation. Cooling of Air Adiabatic Change: Heating or cooling without transferring heat to/from surroundings. As a parcel of air rises.
Precipitation Precipitation is any form of water that falls to the Earth's surface. 1.
The Water Cycle AND Cloud Types.
Dew, frost and fogs.
Warm Up 3/18/08 The wet adiabatic rate of cooling is less than the dry rate because ____. a. of the dew point b. of the release of latent heat c. wet air.
Water in the Atmosphere. Water Cycle: a)Ice – solid b)Water – liquid c)Water Vapor – gas 3 States of Water in Atmosphere.
Unit 4 Lesson 2 Clouds and Cloud Formation
Unit 1: Water Systems on Earth Chapter 1
Grade 8 Science Unit 1: Water Systems on Earth Chapter 1
WEATHER By: Jimmy Burgard. What is evaporation? evaporation is the process by which water changes from a liquid to a gas or vapor. if you put an ice cube.
Water on Earth!!! Ms. Coulter.
5.03 Moisture References: FTGU pages ,
Earth is the only planet with liquid water at its surface.
Unit 1 Lesson 2 The Water Cycle
Earth’s Waters Water Continually Cycles – 1.1  Water is a solid, liquid, & gas.  71% of earth’s surface is water.  Our body is two-thirds water.  Fresh.
Water in the Atmosphere I. Atmospheric Moisture Water exists on Earth in 3 forms:  Liquid  Solid (ice)  Gas.
 Important gases in atmosphere as they relate to atmospheric pressure  State Change of water  Humidity and dew points affecting weather  Explain motion.
Erosion by Glaciers. A glacier is Any large mass of ice that moves slowly over land Think of it as a moving river of ice and snow.
Unit D – Water Systems. Water is Key to Life without water, there would be no life – humans need 1-2 litres of water daily to keep our organs properly.
7 th Grade Science - Weather.  Water is constantly cycled through ecosystems  Oceans contain about 97% of the world’s water  The remainder is freshwater.
WATER IN THE ATMOSPHERE CHAPTER 18.1 HUMIDITY AND CONDENSATION.
Chemistry Unit. Properties of Water and their Relationship to Weather and Climate.
Chapter 23 – Sections 1, 2, and 3 Earth’s Surface.
The Water Cycle.
Water in the Atmosphere Monroe Chapter 24, Sections 1 and 2 and
Clouds and Cloud Formation. What is a cloud? A cloud is a collection of small water droplets or ice crystals suspended in the air. They are visible because.
1. What is the water cycle? 2. What are sources of water on Earth? 3. How does ocean water move? 4. How do oceans affect the weather? 5. In what ways.
Water cycle and precipitation. Evaporation/Transpiration · Water enters the atmosphere as water vapor through evaporation and transpiration, plants releasing.
WINDS & FRONTS 1/30 – 2/ Prevailing Winds Larger-scale winds that blow in the same direction.
Chapter 2.1. Seventy percent of the earth’s surface is covered with water. There is water literally all around us in the form of water vapor, or water.
Chapter 18 Characteristics of water… Frozen water = ice
The Water Cycle. Facts About Water Water is the most important material on earth. Water continuously changes forms so it can be used and recycled. Matter.
Weather
Have you ever just looked at clouds?  Why do we have clouds?  Why are there different shapes?  What can they tell us about the weather?
Notes: The Water Cycle and Unique Properties of Water
The Water Planet Chapter 2 Section 1. Water Water covers 70% of the earth’s surface Examples: Streams, Rivers, Lakes, Seas, Oceans, Water Vapor, Glaciers,
Surface Condensation Water vapor condensing on large surfaces is called dew. Dew Point is the temperature that saturation occurs and condensation begins.
WHAT IS WEATHER?  The weather is just the state of the atmosphere at any time, including things such as temperature, precipitation, air pressure and cloud.
Chapter 3 Section 3 The Hydrosphere & Biosphere. Objectives Name the three major processes in the water cycle. Describe the properties of ocean water.
Unit 3 –The Water Cycle Lesson 1
Welcome to the Atmospheric Moisture and Precipitation Presentation. Here you will find visual resources that will help you understand this topic. These.
In this presentation you will: The Water Cycle explore the stages of the water cycle Next >
The Water Cycle Sunshine The sun will shine on water located in various areas making it warmer. This causes the water to eventually turn into vapor.
Evaporation Evaporation is the process where a liquid, in this case water, changes from its liquid state to a gaseous state. Liquid water becomes water.
Glaciers.  Glaciers: Masses of ice built up over thousands of years.  Alpine Glaciers: Glaciers that occur in high altitudes, such as mountains.  Continental.
Unit 1: Water Systems on Earth
Grade 8 Science Unit 1: Water Systems on Earth. Effects of Water? Churchill River.
Chapter 18.  Water vapor  Precipitation  Condensation  Latent heat  Heat is added but there is no temperature change because the heat is instead.
Objectives: Define weather. Define weather. Identify and describe weather variables. Identify and describe weather variables. Explain how weather is related.
 Name the three major processes in the water cycle.  Describe the properties of ocean water.  Describe the two types of ocean currents.  Explain how.
Chapter 18 Moisture, Clouds, & Precipitation Water in the Atmosphere When it comes to understanding atmospheric processes, water vapor is the most.
Air Pressure & Wind Patterns. What is air pressure?  Air pressure is the force of molecules pushing on an area.  Air pressure pushes in all direction.
Chapter 18 Water in the Atmosphere. #1 Water is a unique substance because it is only the substance that commonly exists in all 3 states of matter. Water.
Meteorology Earth’s Atmosphere Weather and Climate.
The Hydrosphere and Biosphere
MOISTURE, CLOUDS & PRECIPITATION Chapter 18 * REMINDER - water vapor is the source of all precipitation. Water’s Changes of State 1) Melting- solid to.
The Water Cycle.
Water & Precipitation Notes
Earth is the only planet with liquid water at its surface.
Clouds… and what they tell us.
Essential Question: How does the water cycle explain various atmospheric conditions on the Earth? Standard: S6E3b. Relate various atmospheric conditions.
PRECIPITATION Chapter 11.3 notes.
Water changes & Cycle Page 17 of INB.
Introduction to Atmospheric Sciences Plymouth State University
Presentation transcript:

Topic 10 Ice and Fog GEOL 2503 Introduction to Oceanography

Ice Ice is fresh water, pure H 2 O Dissolved materials are left behind in the surface water Remaining surface water has increased salinity (same amount of salt, less liquid water)

Sea Ice Frozen ocean surface water Photos from the International Ice Patrol photo gallery: iip/Photo_Gallery/Category.s html

Land Ice Earth's ice cover formed on land as the result, principally, of the freezing of precipitation Takes water from one reservoir (ocean) and moves it to another (land) Changes the volume of water in oceans (and sea level)

Ice Sheets Regional, extensive covering of land ice Antarctic—largest Greenland—second largest Sometimes referred to simply as glaciers, but there are also small glaciers in mountains and elsewhere that are not ice sheets

More Ice Terms Fast Ice—sea ice anchored to land mass, doesn’t move Ice Floe—sea ice not anchored, moves with currents Iceberg—broken off chunks of land ice

Icebergs Ice is about 10% less dense that liquid water So only about 10% floats above water “tip of the iceberg”

Icebergs off Greenland

1 2 3 Iceberg photos from IIP: 1.Coast Guard plane 2.Tabular iceberg 3.World’s tallest iceberg, 550 feet

Notice the latitude at which the Titanic sank. Since then, the sea surface has warmed enough that today there are no icebergs south of about 45 degrees north latitude

Life of an Iceberg This is the basic drift of an average iceberg during its 2-3 year life cycle. The numbers correspond to the next few slides showing the different stages of the iceberg's life in more detail

Birth (very large iceberg) Photo of glaciers on Greenland's West Coast which produces most of the icebergs that drift down into the north Atlantic shipping lanes.

Childhood (large to very large icebergs) This photo shows winter off of Baffin Island, and the many very large icebergs that spend the early part of their "lives" there.

Teen (medium icebergs) Here is the rugged coastline of Labrador, where large icebergs often ground themselves or break up into smaller pieces as they continue traveling south.

Young Adult (medium rolling or breaking-up icebergs) This picture shows the St. John's, Newfoundland area, where medium-sized icebergs continue to break up and roll through shipping lanes and past oil rigs.

Old Age (small icebergs) When the iceberg reaches this stage it is often small in size (also called a growler) from years of melting and breaking up. Once icebergs reach old age, they quickly

Water Cycle of an Iceberg (see next slide) The life cycle of the iceberg is also a key part of nature's water cycle. First, water in the ocean (including water from the small melted icebergs) evaporates and forms clouds. Some of those clouds are then carried by the wind over the country of Greenland where the cold air causes them to condense. This condensation causes the clouds to release the water as precipitation in the form of snow. This snow fall builds for thousands of years, and then compresses to form glaciers. Due to their immense weight the glaciers are then forced down to the ocean by gravity. As they reach the ocean pieces of the glacier break off and fall into the ocean, creating icebergs. The iceberg goes through its life cycle, travels through the ocean, grows smaller over time and then once again melts, starting the water cycle all over again.

The water cycle of an iceberg (see previous slide)

Iceberg Shapes 1. Tabular (Flat) 2. Wedge 3. Dome 4. Blocky 5. Dry-docked (Connected under water) 6. Pinnacled (Pointed) 7. Non-tabular (Anything else)

1. Tabular (Flat) 2. Wedge

3. Dome 3. Blocky

5. Dry-docked (Connected under water) 6. Pinnacled (Pointed)

7. Non-tabular (Anything else)

Fog Cloud at ground level Form when air can’t hold all the water vapor (cool air can’t hold as much as warm) Fog/clouds are liquid water—droplets Three types –Advective –Radiative –Sea Smoke

Advective Fog Warm air, saturated with water vapor Moves over colder water Blanket of fog forms at surface of water Tends to persist Grand Banks San Francisco

Radiative Fog Warm days, cold nights Earth surface cools at night So does air above surface Moisture in air condenses at night Forms low-lying, thick fog Dissipates as air warms, water evaporates Also called “radiation fog”

Sea Smoke Dry, cold air Moves over warmer water Water warms air above it Air picks up moisture from water Warmed air rises rapidly Air cools, water vapor condenses Forms ribbons of fog

How sea smoke forms

Ice Fog forms when the air temperature is well below freezing composed entirely of tiny ice crystals that are suspended in the air will only be witnessed in cold Arctic / Polar air Generally the temperature will be 14 F or colder in order for ice fog to occur.

Ice fog

Freezing Fog Occurs when the water droplets that the fog is composed of are "supercooled“ Supercooled water droplets remain in the liquid state until they come into contact with a surface upon which they can freeze Any object the freezing fog comes into contact with will become coated with ice. The same thing happens with freezing rain or drizzle.

Freezing fog