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Basic Properties of the Atmosphere
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Heat and Temperature Temperature: Average energy of molecules or atoms in a material Heat: Total energy of molecules or atoms in a material Can have large amount of heat but low temperatures Can have high temperatures but little heat
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Heat and Temperature The Arctic Ocean has a large amount of heat (because of large mass) even though the temperature is low. Air in an oven at 500 F has high temperature but little heat. However, touch anything solid in the oven, and you’ll get burned. Same temperature, much larger amount of heat.
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Heat and Temperature The earth’s outermost atmosphere is extremely “hot” but its heat content is negligible The surface of the moon can reach 250 F in sunlight and -200 F in shadow, but the vacuum around the Apollo astronauts contained no heat. It takes time for things to warm up and cool off.
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Temperature Scales Fahrenheit Centigrade or Celsius
Water Freezes at 32 F Water Boils at 212 F Centigrade or Celsius Water Freezes at 0 C Water Boils at 100 C Two scales exactly equal at -40
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Converting C to F – In Your Head
Double the Centigrade Subtract the first Digit Add 32
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Converting F to C – In Your Head
Subtract 32 Add the first Digit Divide by two
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Absolute Temperature Once atoms stop moving, that’s as cold as it can get Absolute Zero = -273 C = -459 F Kelvin scale uses Celsius degrees and starts at absolute zero Most formulas involving temperature use the Kelvin Scale
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Electromagnetic Radiation
Radio: cm to km wavelength Microwaves: 0.1 mm to cm Infrared: to 0.1 mm Visible light – mm Ultraviolet 10-9 – 4 x 10-7 m X-rays – 10-9 m Gamma Rays –10-11 m
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Composition of the Atmosphere
Nitrogen % Oxygen % Argon 0.93% (9300 ppm) Carbon Dioxide % (350 ppm) Neon 18 ppm Helium 5.2 ppm Methane 1.4 ppm Ozone ppm
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Other Components of the Atmosphere
Water Droplets Ice Crystals Sulfuric Acid Aerosols Volcanic Ash Windblown Dust Sea Salt Human Pollutants
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Structure of the Atmosphere
Defined by Temperature Profiles Troposphere Where Weather Happens Stratosphere Ozone Layer Mesosphere Thermosphere Ionosphere
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Troposphere Heating of the Surface creates warm air at surface
Warm air rises, but air expands as it rises and cools as it expands (Adiabatic cooling) Heating + Adiabatic Cooling = Warm air at surface, cooler air above Buoyancy = Cool air at surface, warmer air above Two opposing tendencies = constant turnover
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Stratosphere Altitude 11-50 km Temperature increases with altitude
-60 C at base to 0 C at top Reason: absorption of solar energy to make ozone at upper levels (ozone layer) Ozone (O3) is effective at absorbing solar ultraviolet radiation
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Mesosphere 50 – 80 km altitude Temperature decreases with altitude
0 C at base, -95 C at top Top is coldest region of atmosphere
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Thermosphere 80 km and above
Temperature increases with altitude as atoms accelerated by solar radiation -95 C at base to 100 C at 120 km Heat content negligible Traces of atmosphere to 1000 km Formerly called Ionosphere
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Why is the Mesosphere so Cold?
Stratosphere warmed because of ozone layer Thermosphere warmed by atoms being accelerated by sunlight Mesosphere is sandwiched between two warmer layers
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Composition and Altitude
Up to about 80 km, atmospheric composition is uniform (troposphere, stratosphere, mesosphere) This zone is called the homosphere Above 80 km light atoms rise This zone is sometimes called the heterosphere
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Mean Free Path Below 80 km, an atom accelerated by solar radiation will very soon hit another atom Energy gets evenly distributed Above 80 km atoms rarely hit other atoms Light atoms get accelerated more and fly higher Few atoms escape entirely
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Planets and Atmospheres
At top of atmosphere, an atom behaves like any ballistic object Velocity increases with temperature If velocity exceeds escape velocity, atom or molecule escapes Earth escape velocity 11 km/sec. Moon escape velocity 2.4 km/sec
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Atmospheric Measurements
Temperature Pressure Humidity Wind Velocity and Direction
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Weather Instruments Temperature: Thermometer Pressure: Barometer
Humidity: Hygrometer Wind Velocity and Direction: Anemometer and Wind Vane
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Thermometers Fluid Bimetallic Electronic Mercury Alcohol
Use expansion of fluid Bimetallic Differential expansion of different metals Electronic Electrical resistance change with temperature
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Barometers Mercury Aneroid
Air pressure will support 10 meters of water Mercury is 13 times denser Air pressure will support 76 cm of mercury Aneroid Air pressure deforms an evacuated chamber
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Hygrometers Filament Sling Psychrometer Electrical
Hair expands and contracts with humidity Sling Psychrometer Measures cooling by evaporation Two thermometers Wet bulb and Dry bulb Electrical Chemicals change resistance as they absorb moisture
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Sounding Balloons carry radiosondes
Thermometer Barometer Hygrometer Transmitter Typically reach 30 km before balloon breaks
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Radar Detect precipitation types and amounts
Doppler radar measures velocity of winds
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Satellite Studies Visual imagery Infrared imagery Laser spectroscopy
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Earth’s Radiation Budget
What comes in must go out Direct Reflectance (Short Wave) 31% Infrared Re-emission (Long Wave) 69%
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How Heat Moves Radiation Conduction Convection
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Albedo Albedo = % incident energy reflected by a body
Fresh snow: 75 – 95% Old snow: 40 – 60% Desert: 25 – 30% Deciduous forest, grassland: 15 – 20% Conifer forest: 5 – 15% Camera light meters set to 18%
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Global Albedo
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Air Pressure By lucky coincidence, earth’s atmospheric pressure is approximately neat round numbers in metric terms 14.7 pounds per square inch (1 kg/cm2) Pressure of ten meters of water Approximately one bar or 100 kPa Weather reports use millibars (mb) One mb = pressure of one cm water
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Pressure and Altitude Average at sea level 1013 mb
500 mb at 5 km (upper limit of human settlement) 280 mb at 10 km 56 mb at 20 km 1 mb at 50 km mb at 100 km
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Pressure and Altitude
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