Water and Ocean Structure Chapters 6-7. WORLDS WATER SOURCES:

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Properties of Sea Water What makes water so special? Why is the ocean salty? What makes water so special? Why is the ocean salty?
Advertisements

Oceanography Chapter Heating of Earth’s surface and atmosphere by the sun drives convection within the atmosphere and oceans, producing winds and.
Chapter 22 Test Review Place these notes in your Meteorology Notebook.
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. CHAPTER 5 Water and Seawater.
Water: Structure and Special Properties. 5.1 Why Does Water Have Such Unusual Properties? To understand why water has such unusual properties, you must.
Physical and Chemical Properties of Water. Do Now! List the various ways that water is used. Using prior knowledge, predict the % of typical water usage.
Why are we spending so much money going to Mars? Gusev Crater on Mars (taken by the Mars Exploration Rover Spirit on Jan. 10, 2004.
General Chemistry Element –composed of atoms Nucleus –protons and neutrons electrons.
General Chemistry Element –composed of atoms Nucleus –protons and neutrons electrons.
Seawater Chemistry 70% of the Earth is covered by ocean water!
Chapter 6: Water and Seawater Fig Atomic structure Nucleus Protons and neutrons Electrons Ions are charged atoms.
Focus question: students will write the focus question in their notebooks Seawater Composition Almost anything can be found in seawater. This includes.
Refer to the figure below
SEAWATER and the properties of the water molecule.
Chapter : Seawater Fig Density of seawater to g/cm 3 Ocean layered according to density Density of seawater controlled by temperature,
Where’s the Water? F ReservoirVolume (10 6 km 3 )Percent Ocean Ice (polar) Groundwater Lakes Atmosphere Rivers
Seawater Chemistry.
Oceanography: Properties of Water. Density of Water Density - __________________________________ __________________________________ Density - __________________________________.
The Oceans Composition. The Oceans There are five main oceans: –Pacific, Atlantic, Indian, Arctic, Antarctic.
States of Matter & Bond Strength –Gas –Gas = Molecules not bonded to one another; move independently. Takes the volume and shape of its container. –Liquid.
Properties of Ocean Water Chapter Ocean Water 1. Ocean water has both chemical and physical properties. a. Chemical properties are those characteristics.
Water and Ocean Structure Chapter 6. The Water Molecule Molecule Molecule –Group of atoms held together by chemical bonds Covalent bonds Covalent bonds.
Ocean Chemistry Unit 5.  The chemical properties of the ocean are important to understand because the marine environment supports the greatest abundance.
Chemical and Physical Features of the World Ocean.
CHEMICAL OCEANOGRAPHY
Seawater Seawater is a solution of about 96.5% water and 3.5% dissolved salts. The most abundant salt in seawater is sodium chloride (NaCl). Most elements.
Guided Notes about Seawater
CHAPTER 5 Water and Seawater
Physics of Seawater.
Chemical and Physical Features of Seawater Chapter 3.
15.1 Composition of Seawater.  The total amount of solid material dissolved in water  Mass of dissolved substances : Mass of the water sample  Shown.
PROPERTIES OF SEAWATER
SEAWATER PROPERTIES: SALINITY All water, even rain water, has dissolved chemicals called “salts” Salinity = the amount of dissolved salts in the water.
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. CHAPTER 5 Water and Seawater.
Water. Unique properties – important for understanding interaction between ocean & atmosphere –Climate Dissolved constituents and how they affect water’s.
Properties of seawater. Properties of water 1.Polarity and hydrogen bonding cohesion good solvent many molecules dissolve in H 2 O 2.lower density as.
Ocean Chemistry Unit 5. Colligative Properties of Seawater   Heat Capacity – –heat required to raise 1 g of substance 1°C – –Heat capacity of water.
 WOD: DIATRIBE (DYE uh tryb) n.  a bitter verbal attack  What properties does water have because it is a polar molecule? 10/21Ch 6.3 notes26 10/21Pg.
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. CHAPTER 5 Water and Seawater.
Seawater Chapter 15 Section 2.
Videos from sea floor s s
Videos from sea floor s s
CHAPTER 6 Water and Seawater. H 2 O molecule Two hydrogen H and one oxygen O atoms bonded by sharing electrons Two hydrogen H and one oxygen O atoms bonded.
Salinity and Density Differences VERTICAL STRUCTURE, THERMOHALINE CIRCULATION & WATER MASSES.
Chemical And Physical Features of Seawater Chapter 3.
CHAPTER 5 Water and Seawater
Seawater Salinity, Density, Temperature. Water molecule unique in structure and properties H 2 O is the chemical formula for water. Unique properties.
Ocean Water and Ocean Life
© 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 5 Water and Seawater Salinity.
Chemical Properties of Seawater. I. The water molecule 1.Made of two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom.
Chemical & Physical Properties of SeaWater
SALINITY. Atomic structure Atoms are the building blocks of all matter Nucleus contains: Neutrons (no charge) Protons (+ charge) Outer shell(s) contain:
Water STUDY PLAN The Water Molecule The Water Molecule Water unusual Thermal Characteristics Water unusual Thermal Characteristics Water is a Powerful.
Temperature SalinityDensityLight Everything Else.
Heat vs Temperature Heat –Form of energy Temperature –Measure of the vibration of molecules –Response to the input or removal of heat.
Chapter Overview Water has many unique thermal and dissolving properties. Seawater is mostly water molecules but has dissolved substances. Ocean water.
Music today: Billy Ocean, “Get Outta My Dreams and Into My Car”
Marine Biology Definition: Why study? Includes: Geology
Properties of Seawater
Chemical and Physical Features of the Seawater and the World Oceans
Chemical and Physical Features of the Seawater and the World Oceans
Seawater Seawater is a solution of about 96.5% water and
Salinity of Oceans.
Marine Hydrology Oceanography Properties of seawater Topics:
CHAPTER 5 Water and Seawater
CHAPTER 5 Water and Seawater
The Composition of Seawater
70% of the Earth is covered by ocean water!
Density of water: 1.0 g/cm3 Density of steel: 8.0 g/cm3
Chemical Properties of Water
Presentation transcript:

Water and Ocean Structure Chapters 6-7

WORLDS WATER SOURCES:

Learning Objectives 1. Understand the nature of the water molecule and its unique properties (polarity, density and thermal properties) and how these are altered by the presence of salt in solution. 2. Know the types of materials that are dissolved in sea water, their importance and how they vary with time. 3. Explain variations in salinity, temperature, and pressure within the sea and how they alter the chemical and physical properties of the ocean.

States of Matter (e.g. water)

Atomic Structure

Hydrogen bonds – cohesion - surface tension!

The formation of ice in freshwater:

Seawater density depends on temperature, salinity and pressure! Therefore, it increases with > salt content at const. temp; high density in cold, salty waters –why is this important? Density of freshwater:

Why does ice float on water?

Sodium Chloride Rock SALT Ions CationAnion Water is a powerful solvent: (“the universal solvent”)

Cycling of dissolved components in seawater: Did oceans’ salinity increase over time?

35 g of salt in 1000 g of seawater Major dissolved components in seawater:

Residence Time FHow long do the various dissolved ions stay in the ocean? Depends on how “reactive”.  Residence Time: The average time spent by a substance in the Ocean = Amount in Sea Rate entering or exiting

The layer of rapidly changing salinity with depth; meters; Same as pycnocline (density) and thermocline;

Salinity map showing areas of high salinity (36 o/oo) in green, medium salinity in blue (35 o/oo), and low salinity (34 o/oo) in purple. Salinity is rather stable but areas in the North Atlantic, South Atlantic, South Pacific, Indian Ocean, Arabian Sea, Red Sea, and Mediterranean Sea tend to be a little high (green). Areas near Antarctica, the Arctic Ocean, Southeast Asia, and the West Coast of North and Central America tend to be a little low (purple).

Why is the Atlantic more salty?

Summary: èWater is a polar molecule -- unique properties (melting pt, heat capacity, dissolving power, water denser than ice) èSalinity is the total dissolved solids èSalinity in the surface ocean varies by Evaporation - Precipitation èPrinciple of Constant Proportions èResidence Time in the Oceans

Carbonate buffering system keeps the pH of seawater constant = 8.1 pH = potential/power of hydrogen

Carbonate Buffering System

What is temperature? using  Kinetic temperature definition

What is temperature? It is a direct measure of the average kinetic energy of atoms and molecules that make up substance. Temp. changes when heat energy is added to or removed from a substance.kinetic energy It is measured in (Celsius, Kelvin, and Fahrenheit).

1) Represents the transfer of energy from high to low temperature. Therefore, heat has units of Energy (1 calorie, calor = heat; the amount of heat required to raise the temp. of 1 gram of water by 1 C°); 2) An object does not possess "heat"; the appropriate term for the microscopic energy in an object is internal energy.internal energy HEAT (the energy of moving molecules = kinetic energy)

Temperature vs Heat FTemperature is a measure of how fast the molecules in a substance are moving FHeat is a measure of how much energy has to be put into (or gotten out of) a substance to change its temperature, or “state” (solid, liquid, gas)

First Law of Thermodynamics

Heat Capacity – the amount of heat required to raise the temp. of 1 g of any substance by 1 °C; – Water has one of the highest heat capacities known, which makes water excellent heat transfer material; and – therefore, allows ocean currents to moderate global climate!

Evaporation from lakes, oceans, rivers, etc. occurs for temperatures lower than 100 o C But it requires more energy to do so

Atmospheric transport of surplus heat from low latitudes into heat deficient high latitudes areas: