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Weather and Climate basics Charles Darwin Climate Symposium 14 October 2011 Joel Lisonbee NT Climate Services Centre Bureau of Meteorology.

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Presentation on theme: "Weather and Climate basics Charles Darwin Climate Symposium 14 October 2011 Joel Lisonbee NT Climate Services Centre Bureau of Meteorology."— Presentation transcript:

1 Weather and Climate basics Charles Darwin Climate Symposium 14 October 2011 Joel Lisonbee NT Climate Services Centre Bureau of Meteorology

2 Weather and Climate basics Goal: To explain and define basic weather and climate terms

3 Weather: “The state of the atmosphere…the short-term (minutes to days) variations in the atmosphere ” AMS Glossary of Meteorology Climate: “The slowly varying aspects of the atmosphere-hydrosphere-land surface system” AMS Glossary of Meteorology –Often taken as a 30 year average

4 Air Pressure Force = mass X acceleration, F=ma Pressure: net force per unit area, P=F/A 1 m ma Air has mass Gravity pulls air down Air Pressure is the force exerted by the column of air directly above you. Measured by a barometer In millibars (mb) Hecto Pascals (hPa) Sometimes inches of mercury 1 m AIR

5 Side note: air pressure and altitude If air pressure is weight of air above you Then less air above you means lower air pressure

6 L AIR Air pressure (cont.) AIR H DivergenceConvergence

7 Air Pressure

8 Pressure lines (isobars) on a weather chart L

9 Air flow around Low pressure system L

10 Hot Air Rises…Cold Air Sinks

11 Atmospheric layers % of atmosphere above that level Temperature change with height –Troposphere 6.5 °C/km –Dry air parcel 9.8 °C/km

12 LHH Sea Surface Temperature (SST): The temperature of the ocean surface Convection

13 Over Simplified model Other Complications include: Spinning planet Tilted axis Land masses/oceans Water vapour North/South Circulation

14 Global Circulation Forces from Earth’s rotation create: –6 circulation cells –Bands of high and low pressure –Easterly and westerly winds L L L L H H H H

15 LHH East/West circulation Winds are named for the direction they came from: West wind / westerliesEast wind / easterlies

16 Walker Circulation Walker Circulation: a patterns of rising and sinking motion in the Tropics which creates east/west circulation

17 climatology average conditions and anomalies Climate: “The slowly varying aspects of the atmosphere-hydrosphere-land surface system” AMS Glossary of Meteorology –Often taken as a 30 year average Climate variability: “any variations of the atmosphere/ocean system around a mean state” AMS Glossary of Meteorology Climate Change: “Any systematic change in the long-term statistics of climate elements sustained over several decades or longer” AMS Glossary of Meteorology

18 Mean climate and anomaly Measured Expected Anomalies

19 Mean Climate and anomaly Climatology: mean, average, or expected conditions Negative Anomaly Positive Anomaly

20 Climate Variability Example: El Niño/La Niña –Seasonal SST Changes in the Pacific –Seasonal to annual effects –Drought or Flood? Australia or Pacific Islands

21 Climate Change: Trends in past climate

22 Climate Change in Australia www.climatechangeaustralia.gov.auwww.bom.gov.au/climate/change/


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