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NATS 101 Lecture 3 Climate and Weather

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1 NATS 101 Lecture 3 Climate and Weather

2 “Climate is what you expect. Weather is what you get.”
Climate and Weather “Climate is what you expect. Weather is what you get.” -Robert A. Heinlein

3 Weather Weather – The state of the atmosphere: for a specific place
at a particular time Weather Elements 1) Temperature 2) Pressure 3) Humidity 4) Wind 5) Visibility 6) Clouds 7) Significant Weather

4 Responsible for boxed parameters
Surface Station Model Responsible for boxed parameters Temperatures Plotted F in U.S. Sea Level Pressure Leading 10 or 9 is not plotted Examples: plotted as 138 998.7 plotted as 987 plotted as 360 Ahrens, p 431

5 Sky Cover and Weather Symbols
Ahrens, p 431 Ahrens, p 431

6 Wind Barbs Direction Wind is going towards Westerly  from the West
Speed (accumulated) Each flag is 50 knots Each full barb is 10 knots Each half barb is 5 knots 65 kts from west Ahrens, p 432

7 SLP pressure temperature dew point cloud cover Ohio State website wind

8 Practice Surface Station
Temperate (oF) Pressure (mb) Last Three Digits (tens, ones, tenths) Dew Point (later) Moisture Wind Barb Direction and Speed Cloud Cover Tenths total coverage Ahrens, p 431 72 58 111 Decimal point What are Temp, Dew Point, SLP, Cloud Cover, Wind Speed and Direction?

9 Practice Surface Station
Sea Level Pressure Leading 10 or 9 is not plotted Examples: plotted as 138 998.7 plotted as 987 plotted as 360 Ahrens, p 431 42 18 998 Decimal point What are Temp, Dew Point, SLP, Cloud Cover, Wind Speed and Direction?

10 Surface Map Symbols Fronts
Mark the boundary between different air masses…later Significant weather occurs near fronts Current US Map Ahrens, p 432

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12 Radiosonde Weather balloons, or radiosondes, sample atmospheric to 10 mb. They measure temperature moisture pressure They are tracked to get winds Ahrens, Fig. 1

13 Radiosonde Distribution
Radiosondes released at 0000 and at 1200 GMT for a global network of stations. Large gaps in network over oceans and in less affluent nations. Stations ~400 km apart over North America

14 Radiosonde for Tucson Example of data taken by weather balloon released over Tucson Temperature (red) Moisture (green) Winds (white) Note variations of all fields with height UA Tucson 1200 RAOB stratosphere tropopause troposphere temperature profile moisture profile wind profile

15 Climate Climate - Average weather and range of weather, computed over many years. Whole year (mean annual precipitation for Tucson, 1970-present) Season (Winter: Dec-Jan-Feb) Month (January rainfall in Tucson) Date (Average, record high and low temperatures for Jan 1 in Tucson)

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18 Climate of Tucson Monthly Averages
Individual months can show significant deviations from long-term, monthly means.

19 Average and Record MAX and MIN Temperatures for Date

20 Climate of Tucson Probability of Last Freeze
Cool Site: Western Region Climate Center

21 Climate of Tucson Probability of Rain
Cool Site: Western Region Climate Center

22 Climate of Tucson Extreme Rainfall
Cool Site: Western Region Climate Center

23 Cool Site: Western Region Climate Center
Climate of Tucson Snow! Cool Site: Western Region Climate Center

24 Summary Weather - atmospheric conditions at specific time and place
Weather Maps  Instantaneous Values Climate - average weather and the range of extremes compiled over many years Statistical Quantities  Expected Values

25 Reading Assignment Ahrens Pages 25-30 Problems 2.1-2.4
(2.1  Chapter 2, Problem 1) Don’t Forgot the 4”x 6” Index Cards…


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