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ENSC201 Part 1. Energy and Mass Chapter 1. Composition and Structure of the Atmosphere
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ENSC201 Introduction The Atmosphere A mixture of gas molecules, suspended particles, and falling precipitation The atmosphere strongly affects our day-to- day lives
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Meteorology The study of the atmosphere and the processes that cause “weather” Climatology Examines weather elements over long time periods
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Variable Gases Water Vapor Most abundant variable gas Added/ removed to air through the hydrologic cycle Concentrations = nearly 0% to nearly 4% Important to energy balance and many atmospheric processes
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Carbon Dioxide A trace gas 0.038% of atmosphere’s mass Important to Earth’s energy balance Added through biologic respiration, volcanic activity, decay, and natural and human-related combustion Removed through photosynthesis Increasing at a rate of 1.8 ppm/year
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ENSC201 Temporal increases due to human activities Seasonal variations related to biological activity
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ENSC201 Ozone Tri-atomic form of oxygen Absorbs ultraviolet radiation Chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) destroy ozone Destruction peaks over southern hemisphere Antarctic circumpolar vortex limits latitudinal mixing Leads to an O 3 “hole”
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ENSC201 Vertical Structure of the Atmosphere Density Mass (kg) per unit volume (m 3 ) Sea level average = 1.2 kg/m 3 Near surface air is more dense Compressibility Mean free path –At surface = 0.0001 mm –At 150 km = 10 m
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ENSC201 Compressibility of gases relates to density
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ENSC201 Thermal Layers of the Atmosphere Four distinct atmospheric layers Troposphere Stratosphere Mesosphere Thermosphere Each has particular temperature characteristics with height.
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ENSC201 Troposphere Lowest layer Steady temperature decrease with height -6.5 o C/km (-3.6 o F/1000ft) Virtually all weather processes Contains 80% of atmospheric mass Tropopause = top of troposphere
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ENSC201 Violent updrafts may penetrate cloud tops into the stratosphere. The flattened top of this cumulonimbus cloud is in the stratosphere.
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ENSC201 Stratosphere Little actual “weather” Temperature inversion Caused by absorption of UV radiation by O 3 Stratopause = top of stratosphere
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ENSC201 Mesosphere and Thermosphere Combined = 0.1% of total mass The mesosphere Decreasing temperatures with height Coldest layer The thermosphere Slowly merges into space Increasing temperatures with height –“Temperature” = molecular kinetic energy
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Some Weather Basics Weather information is abundant Pressure and wind Wind = horizontal movement of air Caused by unequal pressures
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ENSC201 Pressure units Millibar (mb), Kilopascal (kPa) Isobars Station Models Portray weather information
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Temperature Most obvious weather component Fronts Humidity May be expressed as relative humidity Dew point temperature
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