METEOROLOGY NOTES
     
    I. Layers of the Atmosphere
     A Troposphere
    1.  Bottom layer
    2.  Temperature decreases as altitude increases
    3.  Pressure decreases as altitude increases
    4.  Contains all life and all weather
    5.  Contains CO2 and H20vapor the greenhouse gases
    a. additional CO2 coming from industry &exhaust
    b.  trap heat in the troposphere
    c.  layer has raised 1 degree last century
    1). some scientists do not agree
    2) claim natural warming not due to human pollution
    3) others say we are headed for an ice age
    d.  if trend continues, temps will raise 4 deg in next 200 years, causing
    ice caps to melt.
     B. Stratosphere
    1.  Second layer
    2.  Contains O3 – ozone
    a.  absorbs UV radiation, w/out all life would die from sun’s rays
    3.  O3 absorbs UV, T increase as altitude increases
    4.  CFC, chlorofluorocarbons are chemically reacting to O3=> O2
    a.  basically infinite reaction, each CFC lasts over 200 yrs causing trillions of reactions before it stops.
    b.  Total process is unknown
    c.  Causing a thinning or “hole” over Antartica which fluctuates
    1)  some “healing” has occurred
    2)  UV rays have been tested higher, potential harm to life in algae and bacteria forms here
    d.  Political problems w/developed nations and 3rd world- 3rd world blame us for problem (it’s ours) but US and Canada see it as a world problem – a lot of political tension as to what needs to be done about it.
     
     
     
     
     
    Relative Humidity
    1.  definition – the amount of water in air compared to the amount the air could hold. Dependent on temperature
    2.  0% - extremely dry – Antartica or desert (probably more like 2-10%)
    100% - extremely wet – tropical rain forest – raining
    3.  psychrometer-
    a.  dry bulb- measures regular air temperature
    b.  wet bulb- measures cooling temperature
    c.  use ESRT to identify RH
    d.  talk about curly hair stretches when the humidity is high “bad hair day”, uncontrollable
     
    Dew Point
    1.  definition- the temperature that the air will condense to create “dew”
    2.  also known as fog, clouds etc
    3.  ESRT table
    4.  Requires a nuclei or surface to condense dust, salt molecules, glass, car, other gas molecules
    5.  Frost / killing frost
    6.  LAB ACTIVITY – RELATIVE HUMISITY USING PSYCHROMOTERS, LAB ACTIVITY – Dew Point and Relative Humidity P518-519
     
    Clouds
    1.  condensation of vapor in the sky
    a.  as air rises, temps cool, cool to dew point
    b.  cloud base – altitude air reaches dew point
    1)  makes cloud look flat on bottom – all clouds will start @ same altitude
    2.  types
    a.  cirrus (Ci) – means high altitudes
    1)  thin, feathery, tufted
    2)  since very high made of ice crystals
    b.  Stratus (s) – low sheets or layers of clouds
    c.  Cumulus (c) – thick, puffy, masses
    d.  Alto- medium altitude clouds
    e.  Nimbus – towering usually gray – filled w/ water  
    f.  Examples – stratocumulus – puffy white clouds in layers – covers the sky         Nimbostratus-dark gray layers producing steady rain   Cirrostratus- high altitude layered clouds         cumulonimbus- dark, puffy, rain clouds towering
    g.  Cloud base or condensation level         1)Clouds having a flat bottom – dew point has been reached
    h.  3. Symbols Showing Percentage of Sky Covered see pg 511 – note on ESRT
     
    Forms of Precipitation
     Rain
     Hail
     Sleet- water droplets freeze as they fall through the air column
     Freezing rain – at freezing and rain falls and freezes on surfaces
     Snow
     See precipitation symbols on pg 514 – be familiar – notice on ESRT
     
     
    Rain Shadow
     
    Mountain – use example from the coast of CA – warm, moist air from the Pacific ocean rises w/ the mountain’s surface.
     As air rises it cools, RH increases
     Reaches dew point – creates a cloud
     Air continues to cool and precipitation occurs on the windward side
     Air flows over the mtn top, and begins to warm, relative humidity decreases
       Air is extremely dry – absorbs all water vapor – desert
     
    Acid Rain
     Air flows up and over mountains
     Precipitation –normally acidic around pH 6
       joins with pollution SO2, NO2 specifically drops pH to 2-4
     Adirondack region – specifically granitic, unreactive to acid
       Rain remains acidic hurts insect larvae, frog offspring, fish eggs. Cuticle on trees especially pines and firs – water is crystal clear blue
     
     

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