Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Meteorology: the study of Earth’s atmosphere Meteor – In ancient Greek – meant “High in the air” Current meanings still apply Meteor – astronomical entity.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Meteorology: the study of Earth’s atmosphere Meteor – In ancient Greek – meant “High in the air” Current meanings still apply Meteor – astronomical entity."— Presentation transcript:

1 Meteorology: the study of Earth’s atmosphere Meteor – In ancient Greek – meant “High in the air” Current meanings still apply Meteor – astronomical entity that falls from the sky Clouds, raindrops, snowflakes, fog, dust, etc. are all (technically) meteors Precipitation is known as HYDROMETEORS Electricity is known as ELECTROMETEORS Smoke, haze, dust known as LITHOMETEORS Weather vs. Climate Weather is the current state of the atmosphere Climate is the long term variation in weather for a particular area. Movement of Air

2 1.Wind is caused by the uneven heating of the Earth and its atmosphere 2.These temperature differences lead to the creation of high pressure and low pressure areas 3.Wind – the movement of air from an area of high pressure to an area of low pressure Wind Formation:

3 1.Tilt in the rotation as Earth orbits around the sun 2.Curved surface of the Earth 3.The albedo of the surface 1 and 2 result in differences in angle of insolation ( incoming solar radiation ) Equator receives the most radiation, poles receive the least Cause of Temperature Differences:

4 1.Warm air is less dense than cold air so it rises 2.Cold air sinks and moves along the Earth’s surface Density of Air:

5 The tendency of a moving object to follow a curved path rather than a straight one due to Earth’s rotation  Only perceived, the object/air is moving along a straight line, but the Earth is moving underneath it Coriolis Effect: – deflection of winds and objects as a result of the earth rotating on it’s axis from west to east.

6

7 Weather Systems Weather systems are created by global wind patterns Global Wind Patterns are created by the fact that the earth rotates on it’s axis, and as a result of the majority of earth being covered by water.

8 Global Wind Patterns – caused by Coriolis, and Convection 1. Doldrums - Windless zone of the equator due to hot air rising straight up 2. Trade Winds 0 0 – 30 0 North and South Latitude 30 ° N/S Air SINKS, moves towards equator to the west, get warmer - “Horse latitudes” Gets to the equator – runs into the Trade Winds in the Southern Hemisphere, and they RISE (ITCZ – InterTropical Convergence Zone) – Equator

9 3. Prevailing Westerlies 30 0 – 60 0 responsible for most of the weather changes we get here in the U.S. Called Westerlies – but they move in toward the east (Winds named for the direction from which they originate) 4. Polar Easterlies 60 0 – 90 0 Poles. Areas of high pressure over the poles moving from east to west. - Where they meet warmer air of westerlies they produce stormy region of FRONTS Global Wind Patterns – caused by Coriolis, and Convection

10

11 Jet Streams – Narrow belt of strong winds near top of troposphere, blow from west to east, average 60- 110 miles per hour, position changes daily and seasonally, major effect on weather Jet streams push the air masses along quickly. When the air masses run into each other, fronts occur. All weather occurs at a frontal boundary Most significant Jet Stream is called the Subtropical Jet Stream – which is created when the trade winds meet the prevailing westerlies.

12

13 A monsoon is a seasonal change in the direction of the prevailing, or strongest, winds of a region. Monsoons cause wet and dry seasons throughout much of the tropics. Monsoons are most often associated with the Indian Ocean. Monsoons always blow from cold to warm regions. The summer monsoon and the winter monsoon determine the climate for most of India and Southeast Asia. Monsoon

14

15 Concept: Land heats up and cools down faster than water Local Winds:

16 Wind blowing from land to sea during the night Caused by: Water cools off slower so it warms the air above it causing it to rise Air above land moves in to replace it Land Breeze:

17 Wind blowing from sea to land during the day Caused by: Land warmed faster by the sun Air warmed above land rises Air above water moves in to replace it Sea Breeze:

18 Valley Breeze - During day warm valley air moves up the slopes of the mountains Mountain breeze - At night colder mountain air moves down into the valley Mountain and Valley Breezes


Download ppt "Meteorology: the study of Earth’s atmosphere Meteor – In ancient Greek – meant “High in the air” Current meanings still apply Meteor – astronomical entity."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google