Lecture12 oct21-bb (1)

27
3 PM 90 o F 70 o F Warm Sea breeze 860 mb 900 mb 820 mb isobars 780 mb H L H L Cold

Transcript of Lecture12 oct21-bb (1)

Page 1: Lecture12 oct21-bb (1)

3 PM

90oF 70oF

Wa

rm

Sea breeze

860 mb

900 mb

820 mb

isobars

780 mb

H

LH

L

Co

ld

Page 2: Lecture12 oct21-bb (1)

Land breeze

Page 3: Lecture12 oct21-bb (1)

3

Daytime sea breeze

Nighttime land breeze

Page 4: Lecture12 oct21-bb (1)

Monsoon

Page 5: Lecture12 oct21-bb (1)

Seasonal breeze the monsoon

wind system is one that changes direction seasonally, blowing from one direction in summer and from the opposite direction in winter

Page 6: Lecture12 oct21-bb (1)

Seasonal breeze the monsoon

Summer where is the pressure higher between land and ocean?

Cool surface air sinking high surface pressure

Warm surface air rising low surface pressure

Wind

Page 7: Lecture12 oct21-bb (1)

Stepped Art

Seasonal breeze the monsoon

monsoon wind system is one that changes direction seasonally, blowing from one direction in summer and from the opposite direction in winterDry and cold weather in winter Moist and hot weather in summer

Page 8: Lecture12 oct21-bb (1)

Valley breeze

Page 9: Lecture12 oct21-bb (1)

Stepped Art

Upslope valley breeze daytime

-Upslope/valley breeze forms as solar radiation heats the slope of mountain

Q: What would happen for the air adjacent to the slope from

the heating?

Hot

SW

900 mb

850 mb

800 mb

750 mb

9

900 mb

850 mb

800 mb

750 mb

HL

Page 10: Lecture12 oct21-bb (1)

Katabatic winds

Page 11: Lecture12 oct21-bb (1)

Katabatic winds nighttime

Katabatic winds decent down a mountain slope

LW

11

900 mb

850 mb

800 mb

750 mb

Q: What would happen ?

900 mb

850 mb

800 mb

750 mb

Cold

Katabatic flow

Q: What would be optimal conditions for katabatic winds ?

Page 12: Lecture12 oct21-bb (1)

Katabatic winds nighttime

Katabatic winds decent down a mountain slope

LW

12

900 mb

850 mb

800 mb

750 mb

Cold

Katabatic flow

Optimal conditionso snow-covered elevated

plateauo generates a horizontal

pressure gradientH LPGF

Page 13: Lecture12 oct21-bb (1)

Fig. 7-13, p. 17913

Page 14: Lecture12 oct21-bb (1)

Advection issues on eddy flux measurements

Super-stable layer, flow separation (Yi et al., 2005)

Katabatic flow causes errors in flux measurements

Page 15: Lecture12 oct21-bb (1)

Tower-1

Tower-2

Page 16: Lecture12 oct21-bb (1)

Chinook

Page 17: Lecture12 oct21-bb (1)

1.The air at point A in the figure below will be WARMER COLDER than at B and will have a HIGHER LOWER dew point.

Page 18: Lecture12 oct21-bb (1)

Fig. 5-14, p. 119

2. Lifting by topography

Page 19: Lecture12 oct21-bb (1)

19

Chinook

chinooks are descending, warm and dry winds on the leeside of a mountain range

Page 20: Lecture12 oct21-bb (1)

Santa Ana winds

Page 21: Lecture12 oct21-bb (1)

Santa Ana winds created wildfire

21

Page 22: Lecture12 oct21-bb (1)

Stepped Art

Santa Ana Winds hot and dry winds that often sweep through

the LA Basin in the fall and winterwinds descend from

hot desert terrain down to the L.A. Basin

parcel becomes warmer and drier

because of compression heating

22

need a strong high

over southwestern

U.S.

Page 23: Lecture12 oct21-bb (1)

Single-Cell Model

Three-Cell Model

General Circulation of the Atmosphere

Page 24: Lecture12 oct21-bb (1)

Single-cell model of General Circulation

Q: This single cell has never observed, what important processes have we neglected?

If you assumeearth is uniformly

covered by watersun is directly over

equatorno rotationyou will end up with a

single cell patterncalled the Hadley Cellwarm air rises at the

equator, cold air sinks in the poles

Page 25: Lecture12 oct21-bb (1)

Three-cell model of General CirculationHadley cell (0-30o); Ferrel cell (30-60o); and Polar cell (60-90o)

Q: How can we draw the basic characteristics of the general circulations?

Page 26: Lecture12 oct21-bb (1)

1. draw five belts at 0, 30, and 60 degree and mark L and H on each of them

0o0o

30o 30o

60o60o

30o

60o

30o

60o

L L

H H

L L

LL

L L

H H

H H

Intertropical convergence zone

Subtropical high

Subpolar low

Subpolar low

Subtropical high

2. draw PGF from H to L

PG

F

PG

F

PG

F

PG

F

3. draw wind directions by taking into account CF

NH, deflection to right SH, deflection to left

Polar H

Polar H

Page 27: Lecture12 oct21-bb (1)

Hadley cell Thermal cell