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Stability
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Reading Hess Tsonis Wallace & Hobbs Bohren & Albrecht pp 92 - 106
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Objectives Be able to provide the definition of stability
Be able to describe the two methods by which air is displaced Be able to identify the types of clouds that form during either forced ascent or auto-convective ascent
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Objectives Be able to describe how saturation mixing ratio affects the pseudo-adiabatic lapse rate Be able to describe the changes in meteorological parameters during forced ascent or auto-convective ascent
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Objectives Be able to determine the stability of an atmospheric layer by comparing the environmental lapse rate with either dry or pseudoadiabatic lapse rates Be able to describe the concept of static stability Be able to determine if the atmosphere is statically stable
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Objectives Be able to describe the concept of potential instability
Be able to determine if the atmosphere is potentially unstable Be able to identify the buoyancy equation and describe its significance
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Objectives Be able to identify the type of motions that the Brunt – Vaisala Frequency describes
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Meteorological Stability
The ability of the air to return to its origin after displacement
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Stability Depends on the thermal structure of the atmosphere
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Stability Can be classified into 3 categories Stable Neutral Unstable
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Stable Returns to original position after displacement
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Neutral Remains in new position after being displaced
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Unstable Moves farther away from its original position
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Stability How is air displaced? Two methods 1.) Forced Ascent
2.) Auto-Convective Ascent
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Forced Ascent Some mechanism forces air aloft
Usually synoptic scale feature Cold air Warm air Cool Air
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Forced Ascent Type of clouds Depends on stability
Stable - Stratus Unstable - Cumulus
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Auto-Convective Ascent
Air becomes buoyant by contact with warm ground Usually microscale or mesoscale Cool Hot Cool
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Auto-Convective Ascent
Type of Clouds Cumulus
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Parcel Theory Assumptions Thermally insulated from its environment
Temperature changes adiabatically Always at the same pressure as the environment at that level Te,P Tp,P w
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Parcel Theory Assumptions Hydrostatic equilibrium
Moving slow enough that its kinetic energy is a negligible Te,P Tp,P w
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Stability As parcel rises 1.) Parcel Temperature Changes Unsaturated?
Dry Adiabatic Lapse Rate
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Dry Adiabatic Lapse Rate
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Stability Pseudo- Adiabat Mixing Ratio line 4 UnsaturatedParcel
Temperature 3 2 Height (km) Dry Adiabat 1 -20 -10 10 20 Temperature (°C)
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Stability As parcel rises 1.) Parcel Temperature Changes Saturated?
Pseudoadiabatic Lapse Rate
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Pseudo-Adiabatic Lapse Rate
First Law of Thermodynamics lv = latent heat of vaporization dws = change in mixing ratio due to condensation
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Pseudo-Adiabatic Lapse Rate
Hydrostatic Equation
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Pseudo-Adiabatic Lapse Rate
Divide by cpdz
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Pseudo-Adiabatic Lapse Rate
Rearrange
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Pseudo-Adiabatic Lapse Rate
Varies with dws/dT Big Small 4oC km-1 < Gs < 9.8oC km-1
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Pseudoadiabats Pressure (mb) -60 -50 -40 -30 -20 200 -10 300 400 10 20
Pressure (mb) 400 10 20 500 30 600 40 700 800 2 5 9 14 17 22 25 30 900 1000
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Stability Pseudo- Adiabat Mixing Ratio line 4 Saturated Parcel
Temperature 3 2 Height (km) Dry Adiabat 1 -20 -10 10 20 Temperature (°C)
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Stability As parcel rises 2.) Environmental Temperature Changes
Environmental Lapse Rate (ge)
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Stability Pseudo- adiabat (Gs) Mixing Ratio line 4 Parcel Temperature
3 2 Height (km) Environmental Temperature (ge) Dry Adiabat (Gd) 1 -20 -10 10 20 Temperature (°C)
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Stability Environmental temperature profile depends on many factors
Advection Sinking Air Warm Air Advection Cold Air Advection
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Stability Environmental Temperature Measured by rawinsonde
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Stability Te Tp Te Tp Te Tp Stability depends on Temperature
Environment Parcel Condition of Parcel Unsaturated Te Tp Te Tp Te Tp
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Unsaturated Unstable Once displaced, continues
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Unsaturated-Unstable
Dry Adiabat Gd (Parcel Temperature) 4 3 ge > Gd 2 Height (km) Environmental Lapse Rate (ge) 1 -20 -10 10 20 Temperature (°C)
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Unsaturated Neutral Once displaced, stays
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Unsaturated-Neutral Dry Adiabat Gd (Parcel Temperature) 4 3 ge = Gd 2
Height (km) Environmental Lapse Rate (ge) 1 -20 -10 10 20 Temperature (°C)
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Unsaturated Stable Once displaced, returns
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Unsaturated-Stable 4 ge < Gd 3 Dry Adiabat Gd (Parcel Temperature)
2 Height (km) Environmental Lapse Rate (ge) 1 -20 -10 10 20 Temperature (°C)
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Stability A real environmental sounding sometimes combines all three
ge Gd A real environmental sounding sometimes combines all three Evaluate each layer
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Stability Te Tp Te Tp Te Tp Stability depends on Condition of Parcel
Saturated Te Tp Te Tp Te Tp
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Saturated-Unstable Pseudoadiabat (Gs) 4 3 ge > Gs 2 Height (km)
Environmental Lapse Rate (ge) 1 -20 -10 10 20 Temperature (°C)
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Saturated-Neutral Pseudoadiabat (Gs) 4 3 ge = Gs 2 Height (km)
Environmental Lapse Rate (ge) 1 -20 -10 10 20 Temperature (°C)
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Saturated-Stable Environmental Lapse Rate (ge) 4 3 2 Height (km)
ge < Gs 1 Pseudoadiabat (Gs) -20 -10 10 20 Temperature (°C)
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Stability Dry (or Unsaturated) ge > Gd ge = Gd ge < Gd
Temperature Height Height Height Temperature Temperature ge > Gd ge = Gd ge < Gd Dry Unstable Dry Neutral Dry Stable
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Stability Saturated ge > Gs ge = Gs ge < Gs Saturated Unstable
Temperature Height Height Height Temperature Temperature ge > Gs ge = Gs ge < Gs Saturated Unstable Saturated Neutral Saturated Stable
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Stability Combine to simplify Absolutely Unstable Dry Neutral
Conditionally Unstable Saturated Neutral Absolutely Stable
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Conditionally Unstable
Temperature Height Height Height Temperature Temperature ge > Gd ge = Gd ge < Gd ge > Gs Absolutely Unstable Dry Neutral Conditionally Unstable Height Height Temperature Temperature ge = Gs ge < Gs Saturated Neutral Absolutely Stable
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Stability Conditional Instability
Saturated Adiabatic Lapse Rate (Gs) Conditional Instability Depends upon whether the parcel is dry or saturated Environmental Lapse Rate (ge) 4 3 Height (km) 2 Dry Adiabatic Lapse Rate (Gd ) 1 -20 -10 10 20 Temperature (°C)
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Stability Conditional Instability Unsaturated Parcel Stable 4 3
Adiabatic Lapse Rate (Gs) Conditional Instability Unsaturated Parcel Stable Environmental Lapse Rate (ge) 4 3 Height (km) 2 Dry Adiabatic Lapse Rate (Gd ) 1 -20 -10 10 20 Temperature (°C)
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Stability Conditional Instability Saturated Parcel Unstable 4 3
Adiabatic Lapse Rate (Gs) Conditional Instability Saturated Parcel Unstable Environmental Lapse Rate (ge) 4 3 Height (km) 2 Dry Adiabatic Lapse Rate (Gd ) 1 -20 -10 10 20 Temperature (°C)
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Other Types of Stability
Static Stability Potential (or Convective) Instability
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Stability Static Stability
The change of potential temperature with height
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Static Stability Atmosphere is said to be statically stable if potential temperature increases with height Typical of atmosphere
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Static Stability Bigger q Pressure (mb) Smaller q Temperature (oC) -40
1000 900 800 700 600 500 300 200 400 Temperature (oC) 30 40 20 10 -10 -20 -30 -40 -50 -60 Smaller q Bigger q
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Static Stability Large Temperature Inversions Tropopause Stratosphere
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Strong Static Stability Strong Static Stability
-60 -50 -40 -30 -20 200 Bigger q Strong Static Stability -10 300 Pressure (mb) 400 10 20 500 30 600 40 700 800 Strong Static Stability 900 Smaller q 1000 Temperature (oC)
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Potential Instability
The state of an unsaturated layer (or column) of air in the atmosphere Either Wet bulb potential temperature (qw) or Equivalent potential temperature (qe) Decreases with elevation
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Potential Instability
Also Called Convective Instability
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Potential Instability
Common when dry layer tops a warm, humid layer Low level southerly flow Upper level southwesterly flow Warmer & Dry Warm & Moist
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Potential Instability
Layered Lifting (lowest 100 mb)
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Potential Instability
Bottom of Layer New Temp. LCL
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Potential Instability
Top of Layer New Temp. LCL
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Potential Instability
Layer’s Old Lapse Rate
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Potential Instability
Layer’s New Lapse Rate
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Potential Instability
Compare Change in Layer More Unstable
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Potential Instability
Lifting Destabilizes Layer Cold air Warm air Cool Air
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Stability Now the math! But don’t cry ..
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Archimedes’ Principle
The buoyant force exerted by a fluid on an object in the fluid is equal in magnitude to the weight of fluid displaced by the object. Archimedes 287 – 211 BC
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Archimedes’ Principle
‘Square’ bubble in a tank of water B B = buoyancy force
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Archimedes’ Principle
Water pressure in tank increases with depth B p z
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Archimedes’ Principle
Water is in hydrostatic equlibrium B
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Archimedes’ Principle
Force on bottom of ‘bubble’ Fbottom
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Archimedes’ Principle
Force on top of ‘bubble’ Ftop Fbottom
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Archimedes’ Principle
Buoyancy Force B Ftop Fbottom
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Archimedes’ Principle
Horizontal Pressure Differences Balance
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Archimedes’ Principle
Pressure Difference Between Top & Bottom ptop pbottom
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Archimedes’ Principle
Combine Equations B ptop pbottom
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Buoyancy Similar to parcel of air in atmosphere At Equilibrium
Density of Parcel Same as Density of Environment
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Buoyancy Density Difference Results in Net Buoyancy Force B
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Buoyancy Density Difference Results in Net Buoyancy Force B
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Buoyancy Net Buoyancy Force B
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Buoyancy Divide by mass a
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Buoyancy a Ideal gas law
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Buoyancy a Parcel Theory Assumption
Pressure inside parcel same as environmental pressure Not valid for large accelerations
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Buoyancy a Rearrange
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Buoyancy a Temperature difference results in parcel acceleration
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Stability a Parcel Temperature T0
Cools at the dry adiabatic lapse rate a z Tp= parcel temp T0= sfc temp. Gd= dry adiabatic lapse rate z= height above sfc -Gdz T0
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Stability a Environmental Temperature T0 T0 Measured by radiosonde z
-gez Te= environmental temp T0= sfc temp. ge= environmental lapse rate z= height above sfc -Gdz T0 T0
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Stability Substitute
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Stability Dry (or Unsaturated) ge > Gd ge = Gd ge < Gd
Temperature Height Height Height Temperature Temperature ge > Gd ge = Gd ge < Gd Dry Unstable Dry Neutral Dry Stable
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Stability Saturated ge > Gs ge = Gs ge < Gs Saturated Unstable
Temperature Height Height Height Temperature Temperature ge > Gs ge = Gs ge < Gs Saturated Unstable Saturated Neutral Saturated Stable
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Stability Initially stable air is displaced
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Stability How will it react once displacing force is removed?
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Brunt – Vaisala Frequency
Define coefficient of z as N
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Brunt – Vaisala Frequency
Substitute Hey ... this looks like a differential equation!
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Brunt – Vaisala Frequency
For stable conditions where where A & B are constants of integration
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Brunt – Vaisala Frequency
Buoyancy Oscillation Brunt – Vaisala Frequency Brunt – Vaisala Period
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Brunt – Vaisala Frequency
Theory behind buoyancy oscillations in atmosphere Orographic
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Brunt – Vaisala Frequency
Theory behind buoyancy oscillations in atmosphere Temperature (°C) Height (km) 2 4 6 8 CCL 10 12 Convective
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Static Stability The change of potential temperature with height
Proved empirically Pressure (mb) 1000 900 800 700 600 500 300 200 400 Temperature (oC) 30 40 20 10 -10 -20 -30 -40 -50 -60 Smaller q Bigger q
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Static Stability Mathematically ... Take the logarithm
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Static Stability Differentiate
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Static Stability Multiply by T
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Static Stability Substitute Ideal Gas Law
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Static Stability Hydrostatic Equation
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Static Stability Divide by CpTdz
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Static Stability Remember
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Potential Temperature Increases in a Statically Stable Atmosphere
Static Stability For stable atmosphere (ge < Gd ) Potential Temperature Increases in a Statically Stable Atmosphere
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