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Lecture 14 7 February 2005 Atmospheric and Oceanic Circulations (continued) Chapter 6
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Credit: www.physicalgeography.net Wind simply put, wind is the horizontal flow of air in response to differences in air pressure these pressure differences are usually due to uneven solar heating at the surface wind flows because of pressure gradient ‘heat rises’
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Four forces that determine winds 1. Gravity - pulls gas molecules close to Earth density & pressure decrease with height 2. Pressure gradient force - the difference in air pressure between areas 3. Coriolis force - deflects wind from a straight line to the right or left depending on hemisphere 4. Friction force - the drag on air flow from the Earth’s surface
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Pressure Gradient Force
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Pressure Gradient Force and Isobars if there were no other forces acting on wind, it would flow in straight lines (perpendicular to isobars) from high to low pressure zones
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Coriolis Force (just the facts) Rotation of Earth acts to deflect any motion from a straight line Deflection is to right (NH) to the left (SH) Coriolis “force” act on a right angle to the motion Coriolis Force is NOT a real “force” but is caused by viewing motion on a rotating planet
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Figure Credit: “Earth’s Climate” by W. Ruddiman The Coriolis Force affects air flow in response to pressure gradients in the atmosphere
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geostrophic winds - PGF and Coriolis forces are opposite and balanced Credit: www.physicalgeography.net the CF deflects the wind to the right until upper troposphere wind flows parallel to isobars ~7km
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Friction Force Surface friction reduces wind speed and the effects of the Coriolis force Friction causes winds to move across isobars at an angle The friction force operates only in the bottom 0.5-1 km of the atmosphere, and it acts opposite to the direction of motion
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PGF + Coriolis + Friction Forces
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Figure Credit: “Earth’s Climate” by W. Ruddiman
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Show shockwave 27_WindPatDev.swf
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Useful things to remember Coriolis Force Acts to the right of motion (left in SH) Not a real force – matter of perspective Geostrophic wind – upper troposphere/ocean Horizontal pressure & Coriolis forces balance Winds go ALONG isobars Surface friction – lower troposphere Enables CROSS isobar flow
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Useful things to remember Low pressure cells Less dense –humid Circulation is counter-clockwise (NH) – cyclonic Convergent near ground – rising air masses High pressure cells More dense – dry Circulation is clockwise (NH) – anticyclonic Divergent near ground – descending air masses
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Heating & Humidity in Tropics solar heating in the tropics expands air and decreases its density - leading to increased buoyancy How would this change the average molecular weight of air? average molecular weight of air is ~29 g/mol average density of air is 1.3 kg/m^3 what happens to air density if you add water vapor? It also gets more humid (adding water vapor)
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Convection on your Stove
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Convection on Earth
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Warm, moist air rises and is replaced by cooler drier air from other sites Credit: http://ess.geology.ufl.edu/ess/Notes/AtmosphericCirculation/ convect.jpeg
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as this air rises, it cools and water condenses out, leading to intense precipitation
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Credit: http://www.geog.ucsb.edu/~jeff/wallpaper/itcz_goes11_lrg.jpg A satellite (GOES) view of the ITCZ over the eastern Pacific InterTropical Convergence Zone
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the position of the ITCZ tracks the sun (it is in the summer hemisphere) - the location of the ITCZ determines the rainy season in many tropical countries, especially those in Africa the horizontal winds within the ITCZ are calm - the doldrums
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The C in ITCZ the intense uplift of air creates horizontal pressure gradients at the surface Credit: NASA JPL as a result, winds converge towards the equator from both hemispheres what about the complete cycle - where does the uplifted air go?
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Equator-to-pole cross section of circulation
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Hadley cell circulation this circulation refers to the complete circulation of rising air in the tropics, descending air over 30 °N and °S, and trade winds converging at the equator the descending branch of the Hadley circulation brings warm, dry air to the surface leading to high pressure & reduced precipitation
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Subtropical high-pressure cells these cells occur where the tropical air descends in either hemisphere
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Equator-to-pole cross section of circulation
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Figure 6.18 Jet Streams
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Show shockwave 04_GlobalWinds.swf
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Figure Credit: http://www.geog.ucsb.edu/~joel/g110_w03/chapt10/vorticity/agburt2_10_07.jpg
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Figure Credit: “Earth’s Climate” by W. Ruddiman Monsoon Circulation
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Figure Credit: “Earth’s Climate” by W. Ruddiman Monsoon Circulation
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Figure Credit: physicalgeography.net Monsoon Circulation
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Asian monsoon intense, dry winds flow from the Asian interior in response to the gradient between the continental high pressure & equatorial (ITCZ) low pressure
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in summer, the ITCZ shifts north, reversing the pressure gradient – winds flow from the Indian ocean & gain moisture Asian monsoon
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Daytime land-sea breeze results from differential heating of land and sea - not from radiation differences - but from the different specific heats of land and water
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Nighttime land-sea breeze at night, the land cools more rapidly than the sea and thus overlying air becomes more dense and has a higher pressure
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What time of day would you go jogging in Los Angeles? WHY?
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