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NATS 101 Intro to Weather and Climate Section 4: 9:00 am MWF SS 100 Lecturer: Prof. Steven L. Mullen TA’s: Stephen Bieda Koichi Sakaguchi Guest Lecturers?

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Presentation on theme: "NATS 101 Intro to Weather and Climate Section 4: 9:00 am MWF SS 100 Lecturer: Prof. Steven L. Mullen TA’s: Stephen Bieda Koichi Sakaguchi Guest Lecturers?"— Presentation transcript:

1 NATS 101 Intro to Weather and Climate Section 4: 9:00 am MWF SS 100 Lecturer: Prof. Steven L. Mullen TA’s: Stephen Bieda Koichi Sakaguchi Guest Lecturers?

2 Lecture 1-Nats 1012 Who Am I? Professor and Department Head Department of Atmospheric Science Joint Faculty Appointment Dept. of Hydrology and Water Resources Research Specialty Precipitation Forecasting, Computer Modeling 30 Years as Atmospheric Scientist M.S. and Ph.D. in Atmospheric Sciences B.S. in Mathematics, Minor in Physics

3 Lecture 1-Nats 1013 Vital Statistics Office Hours: Dr. Mullen – WF 2:00-2:50 pm or by Appointment, PAS 552 621-6842 Mr. Bieda – MW 12:00-1:30 pm, PAS 476 Mr. Sakaguchi – TR 10:00-11:00 am, PAS 526 Required Text: Essentials of Meteorology-An Invitation to the Atmosphere, 4 rd Ed. by C. Donald Ahrens Picture Link Publisher Download, Save $Picture LinkPublisher Download, Save $ Recommended Text: Study Guide for Essentials of Meteorology, 4 rd Ed. by C. Donald Ahrens LinkLink Required Material: Thirty (30) 4''x 6'' index cards.

4 Lecture 1-Nats 1014 Course Description Introduction to the science of weather processes and climate change: atmospheric structure and composition, energy balance, clouds and precipitation, wind systems, fronts, cyclones, weather forecasting, thunderstorms, lightning, hurricanes, ozone hole, air pollution, global warming and optical phenomena.

5 Lecture 1-Nats 1015 Course Description Emphasis will be given to phenomena that have strong impacts on human activities. The fundamental importance of physics, chemistry and mathematics will be noted. Atmospheric Sciences  Applied Physics

6 Lecture 1-Nats 1016 Attendance Policy Attendance is mandatory, and I reserve the right to tally it throughout the term. After three unexcused absences prior to week 9, I will submit to the Office of Curriculum and Registration an administrative drop from the course and assign a grade in accordance with UA policy. http://catalog.arizona.edu/2006-07/policies/classatten.htm

7 Lecture 1-Nats 1017 Student Behavior UA Code of Academic Integrity, Code of Conduct and Student Code of Conduct are enforced in this course. Every student is responsible for learning these codes and abiding by them. http://w3.arizona.edu/~studpubs/policies/ppmainpg.html http://w3.arizona.edu/~studpubs/policies/ppmainpg.html Students can submit complaints online at http://web.arizona.edu/~dos/uapolicies/ http://web.arizona.edu/~dos/uapolicies/

8 Lecture 1-Nats 1018 Grading Policy Final grade will be based on scores from closed book/closed notes quizzes and final exam. Quizzes will consist of multiple choice questions and short answer questions. Quizzes will cover new material presented through the end of the previous lecture day. Extra credit questions given on some quizzes. Extra credit impromptu “pop” quizzes given.

9 Lecture 1-Nats 1019 Grading Policy There will be seven quizzes during the term. Dates for the quizzes are Sep 6, Sep 20, Oct 4, Oct 18, Nov 1, Nov 17, Dec 1. No Exceptions Students who arrive late on quiz days will be not allowed to take the quiz after the first student turns in her/his quiz. No Exceptions The lowest score among the seven quizzes will be excluded from the course grade. Therefore, no make-up quizzes.

10 Lecture 1-Nats 10110 Grading Policy If your final exam score exceeds the average of your 6 best quizzes, the quizzes will comprise 60% of your term grade and the final 40%. Otherwise, the quizzes will comprise 75% of your term grade and the final 25%. CARROT:CARROT: If your average is 90% or higher on all 7 quizzes, you will earn an exemption from the final and will receive an "A'' for the course. No Extra Credit Projects. No Exceptions. So Plan Accordingly!

11 Lecture 1-Nats 10111 Final Examination Section 4 (9:00 am MWF): SS 100 Dec 15, 8:00 am - 10:00 pm No Exceptions per UA Policy The final will consist of 60 multiple choice questions and short answer questions. At least 30, but no more than 40 questions, will be taken verbatim from the old quizzes.

12 Lecture 1-Nats 10112 Course Grading Course Grading Scale A 90% or higher B 80.0-89.99% C 65.0-79.99% D 55.0-64.99% E< 55.0%

13 Lecture 1-Nats 10113 Expectations Every student is expected to: Complete all of the assigned reading before the lecture, unless you hear otherwise. Devote a minimum of 2 hours outside of class studying, reading, etc. for every hour of classroom lecture. Unit Credit DefinitionUnit Credit Definition dismissedAttend class daily, arrive on time, leave when class is dismissed (courtesy to peer students).

14 Lecture 1-Nats 10114 The Golden Rule Instructor and students all show: Mutual Respect! What exemplifies respectful behavior? No talking No electronics Arriving on time Remaining seated

15 Lecture 1-Nats 10115 Literacy Requirements Although the writing requirement for this course is negligible, there is a science literacy requirement. This means that we: Use scientific notation for writing numbers (especially rather large or small ones). Specify units of physical quantities (e.g. meters for elevation, etc.). Attempt to quantify physical relationships.

16 Lecture 1-Nats 10116 Announcements Course Homepage…is functional! http://www.atmo.arizona.edu/ Click Students and Courses Click Course Links Click NATS101 – Mullen User Name: nats101 (if established) Password: fall2006 (if established)

17 Lecture 1-Nats 10117 Class Format: Lecture Days 3-5 minutes - Map Discussion and Forecast (If computer Gods are friendly) 2-3 minutes - Review/Summary/Clean-up From Prior Lecture (Optional) 35-40 minutes - New Material Lecture, Demos, Discussion 2-3 minutes - Wrap-up and Summary

18 Lecture 1-Nats 10118 Class Format: Quiz Days 10 minutes - Last Minute Questions Passing Out Quiz Materials 30 minutes - Quiz

19 Lecture 1-Nats 10119 LISTSERV Established mullen@listserv.Arizona.EDU Use for any questions, comments, discussions that are general interest to the class. mullen@atmo.arizona.edu is reserved for personal requests not of general interest.mullen@atmo.arizona.edu To subscribe go to http://listserv.arizona.edu/ and click the link “Subscribe to a list”http://listserv.arizona.edu/ http://listserv.arizona.edu/Subscribe.html Follow straightforward instructions!

20 Lecture 1-Nats 10120 LISTSERV If you DID NOT receive an email two days ago, you need to subscribe to the list. You can subscribe by sending an email to listserv@listserv.arizona.edu with the following as the only line in the body of the message. listserv@listserv.arizona.edu subscribe xxxxxx Firstname Lastname Substitute the list you want to join for xxxxxx, i.e. mullen@listserv.arizona.edu. Substitute your first name for Firstname Substitute your last name for Lastnamemullen@listserv.arizona.edu

21 Lecture 1-Nats 10121 EMAIL & LISTSERV Rules Obtain an “arizona.edu” account I will not respond to emails from non “arizona.edu” accounts starting next week Email and Listserv Etiquette No-No’s No Flaming No Profanity No Porn or Other Inappropriate Links No Advertisements No “Off-Topic” Subject Matter http://listserv.arizona.edu/etiquette.html

22 Lecture 1-Nats 10122 Importance of Atmosphere Necessary for a wide spectrum of features Oceans Clouds, Rain, Fresh Water Erosion by Water and Wind Life, Life on Land Blue Skies, Red Sunsets, Twilight Sound

23 Lecture 1-Nats 10123 Importance of Atmosphere Point 1- Offers Protection Consider surface temperatures Without atmosphere? 0 o F average, large day-night swings Similar to the Moon’s Climate With atmosphere… 60 o F average, moderate diurnal swings

24 Lecture 1-Nats 10124 Importance of Atmosphere Point 2 - Offers Protection Consider Surface Radiation Shields against harmful UV radiation

25 Lecture 1-Nats 10125 Importance of Atmosphere Consider Survival Time Without Food  few weeks Without Water  few days Without Air  few minutes

26 Lecture 1-Nats 10126 To Understand the Atmosphere Examine its interfaces with land/ocean with space Sun Space Earth Atmosphere 13,000 km Is a very thin skin 99% below 50 km (31 miles) 50% below 5.5 km (3.4 miles) Atmosphere Picture Energy Flow Solar Input = Output to Space

27 Lecture 1-Nats 10127 NASA photo gallery Note “thinness” of atmosphere in light blue

28 Lecture 1-Nats 10128 Course Building Blocks Intro  1 st week or so Energy  ~2 weeks Moisture  ~2 weeks Dynamics  ~3 weeks Above are interdependent Specific Topics  ~6 weeks

29 Lecture 1-Nats 10129 Reading Assignment "How to Email a Professor" Article"How to Email a Professor" Homepage Link “Reading Assignments” Ahrens Pages 1-13 Problems 1.2, 1.3, 1.10, 1.14


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