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38 Atmospheric Stability Stable vs. Unstable Dry and Moist Adiabatic Processes Skew-T diagrams.

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Presentation on theme: "38 Atmospheric Stability Stable vs. Unstable Dry and Moist Adiabatic Processes Skew-T diagrams."— Presentation transcript:

1 38 Atmospheric Stability Stable vs. Unstable Dry and Moist Adiabatic Processes Skew-T diagrams

2 39 Atmospheric Stability (cont.) Stable vs. Unstable Stable equilibrium Unstable equilibrium

3 40 Atmospheric Stability (cont.) Adiabatic Processes –Parcel of air expands and cools, or compresses and warms, with no interchange of heat with the surrounding environment –An adiabatic process is reversible If the parcel doesn’t saturate, cooling or warming occurs at the dry adiabatic lapse rate –Constant in our atmosphere 10 o C / km

4 41 Atmospheric Stability (cont.) If the parcel does saturate… –Condensation (RH = 100%), Latent Heat released –Latent Heating offsets some of the cooling –Cooling at slower rate: moist adiabatic lapse rate –Not constant, varies with temperature and moisture Average value ~ 6 o C / km –Not reversible (heat added, moisture probably removed) Pseudo-adiabatic process

5 42 Absolutely Stable

6 43 Absolutely Unstable

7 44 Conditionally Unstable

8 45 Growth of a thunderstorm

9 46 Orographic effects

10 47 Skew-T diagram Convenient way to look at the vertical structure of the atmosphere Determine unreported meteorological quantities Parcel stability Observations or model output

11 48 Skew-T diagram (cont.) Basic Definitions –mixing ratio (w) mass of vapor to mass of dry air –saturation mixing ratio (w s ) maximum for a given T and P –wet-bulb temperature (T w ) equilibrium T when water evaporates from a wetted-bulb thermometer at a rate where latent heat lost is balanced by flow of heat from surrounding warmer air –potential temperature ( 2 ) temperature of air if brought dry-adiabatically to 1000 mb –vapor pressure (e) partial pressure of water vapor

12 49 Skew-T diagram (cont.) Basic Definitions (cont.) –virtual temperature (T v ) temperature dry air at pressure P would have so its density equals that of a moist parcel at T and P –dew point temperature (T d ) temperature of a parcel cooled to saturation at constant P –relative humidity 100 x (mixing ratio / saturation mixing ratio) –specific humidity (q) mass of vapor to mass of moist air (nearly the same as mixing ratio) –equivalent temperature (T e ) temperature air would have if all its latent heat were released

13 50 Skew-T diagram (cont.) Basic Definitions (cont.) –equivalent potential temperature ( 2 e ) temperature of a parcel if all moisture condensed out (latent heat released) then the parcel brought dry-adiabatically to 1000 mb –Convective condensation level (CCL) Height where rising parcel just becomes saturated (condensation starts) –Convective temperature (T c ) T that must be reached for a surface parcel to rise to CCL –Lifting condensation level (LCL) Height where parcel becomes saturated by lifting dry-adiabatically –Level of free convection (LFC) Height where parcel lifted dry-adiabatically until saturated, then moist-adiabaticaly, first becomes warmer than the surrounding air

14 51 Skew-T diagram (cont.) Basic Definitions (cont.) –Positive area (or CAPE) Area between the sounding and the moist adiabat that intersects the CCL, above the CCL. Proportional to the amount of energy the parcel gains from the environment. –Negative area (or CIN) Area between the sounding and the dry adiabat that intersects the CCL, below the CCL. Proportional to the energy needed to move the parcel. –Equilibrium level (EL) Height where the temperature of a buoyant parcel again becomes equal to the environment. –Wet bulb zero Height above ground where the wet bulb first reaches zero degrees Celsius. This is the level where hail will begin to melt.

15 52 Skew-T diagram

16 53 Skew-T diagram Isobars

17 54 Skew-T diagram Isotherms

18 55 Skew-T diagram Dry adiabats

19 56 Skew-T diagram Moist adiabats

20 57 Skew-T diagram Saturation Mixing Ratio

21 58

22 59

23 60 LFC EL + LI CIN CAPE

24 61 LFC EL + LI CIN CAPE

25 62

26 63

27 64

28 65

29 66

30 67

31 68 Lab 4 Stability Analysis and Soundings

32 69 Fronts and Air masses Air mass types and sources Frontal types Frontal structure in 3-D

33 70 Fronts and Air masses (cont.) Air mass types –Four general categories: PPolar source (also A for Arctic source) TTropical source ccontinental (land regions) mmaritime (ocean regions) Source regions –Generally flat and uniform composition –Light surface winds –Places dominated by high pressure Arctic plains (ice/snow covered) Subtropical oceans Desert regions

34 71 Fronts and Air masses (cont.) Air masses of North America: (1) cP and cAContinental Polar and Continental Arctic Cold (very cold in winter) and dry, stable conditions. (2) mPMaritime Polar Cool, moist and somewhat unstable. Forms in polar regions, then moves over oceans. (3) mTMaritime Tropical Very warm and moist. Forms over the eastern Pacific and the Caribbean sea and Gulf of Mexico. (4) cTContinental Tropical Hot, dry, and unstable conditions. Forms over northern Mexico and the southwestern U.S. during the summer.

35 72 Air mass source regions

36 73 Fronts and Air masses (cont.) A front is a transition zone between air masses of different densities. Frontal types: –Cold front Zone where colder air is replacing warmer air –Warm front Zone where warmer air is replacing a retreating colder air mass. –Stationary front Zone that has little or no movement. –Occlusions 2 types: Warm and Cold Occur during mature phase of storm development

37 74 Cold front structure

38 75 Warm front structure

39 76 3-D Frontal Structure

40 77 Cold occlusion

41 78 Cold occlusion structure

42 79 Warm occlusion

43 80 Warm occlusion structure

44 81 Flow associated with developing Low

45 82 Lab 5 Stability Analysis and Soundings (cont.)


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