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AMS Weather Studies
Introduction to Atmospheric Science, 5th Edition
Chapter 6
Humidity, Saturation &
Stability
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Driving Question
How does the cycling of water in the Earth-atmosphere system
help maintain a habitable planet?
This chapter covers:
The global water cycle
Transfer processes between Earth’s surface and the atmosphere
Water content of air
Monitoring water vapor
How air becomes saturated
Atmospheric Stability
Lifting Processes
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Case-in-Point
Atmospheric Rivers
Atmospheric Rivers (AR)
Narrow band of concentrated
water vapor transport in the lower
atmosphere
Responsible for most of the
horizontal flow of water outside
of the tropics
Especially in the Pacific coast states
Play important role in fresh water supply
30-50% of the average annual precipitation for the West Coast states
Responsible for more than 90% of the global north/south
transport of water vapor
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Case-in-Point
Atmospheric Rivers
Atmospheric Rivers
ARs that affect Pacific Coast states form, move and develop with
winter storms in the North Pacific Ocean
Warm humid air flows poleward ahead of the cold front; water vapor is
concentrated into narrow ribbons in the warm sector.
ARs occasionally dip southward and entrain moisture and heat directly from
the Pacific subtropics and tropics.
Pineapple Express – originates near Hawaii, flows toward the northeast, and
makes landfall along California coast
Greatest flood potential exists where AR encounters coastal/inland
mountain ranges (orographic lifting)
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Global Water Cycle
Amount of water in Earth-atmosphere system neither increases
or decreases
Internal processes continually generate and break down water
molecules.
Volcanoes and meteors (minute amount) add water
Photodissociation of water vapor and chemical reactions break down
water molecules
Various reservoirs store water
Mostly the ocean (97.2%), ice sheets and glaciers (2.15%)
Sun powers the global water cycle, gravity stops water from
escaping to space
Water falls from the sky as precipitation and flow to oceans.
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Where is the Water Stored?
Note the small
percentage of the
total water stored in
the atmosphere.
It is vital to weather
processes
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The Global Water Cycle
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The Global Water Cycle
Water vapor image showing long range transport.
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The Global Water Cycle
Transfer Processes
Phase changes
Evaporation – more molecules enter the atmosphere as vapor then
return as liquid to the water surface
Condensation – more molecules return to the water surface as liquid
then enter the atmosphere as vapor
Transpiration – water taken up by plant roots escapes as vapor from
plant pores
Evapotranspiration – total of evaporation and transpiration.
Sublimation – ice or snow become vapor without first becoming liquid
Deposition – water vapor becomes solid without first becoming liquid
All 3 phases of water exist in the atmosphere.
Precipitation
Rain, drizzle, snow, ice pellets, hail9
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The Global Water Cycle
The percentage of annual precipitation over land that originally vaporized
from the ocean, averaged over 15 years.
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The Global Water Cycle
Via precipitation and evaporation, the ocean has a net
loss of water and the land has a net gain.
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The Global Water Cycle
Pathways taken by
precipitation after
falling on the surface.
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How Humid is it?
Humidity describes amount of water vapor in the air
Varies within a year, from day-to-day, within a single day, and from
place-to-place
Humid summer air and dry winter air cause discomfort
Measuring humidity
Vapor pressure, mixing ratio, specific humidity, absolute humidity,
relative humidity, dewpoint, precipitable water
Vapor pressure
Water vapor disperses among the air molecules and contributes to
the total atmospheric pressure
Pressure component is vapor pressure
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How Humid is it?
Mixing ratio
Mass of water vapor per mass of the remaining dry air
Expressed as grams of water vapor per kilograms of dry air
Specific humidity
Mass of the water vapor (in grams) per mass of the air containing
the vapor (in kilograms)
In this case, the mass of the air includes the mass of the water vapor
Mixing ratio and specific humidity are so close they are usually
considered equivalent
Absolute humidity
The mass of the water vapor per unit volume of humid air
Normally expressed as grams of14water vapor per cubic meter of air© AMS
How Humid is it?
Saturated air
Air at its maximum humidity
Dynamic equilibrium develops when liquid water becomes vapor at
the same rate as vapor becomes liquid
“Saturation” added to various humidity terms
Saturation vapor pressure, saturation mixing ratio, saturation specific
humidity, saturation absolute humidity
Changing the air temperature disturbs equilibrium
Example: Heating water increases kinetic energy of water molecules,
they more readily escape the water surface as vapor. If the supply of
water is sufficient, a new dynamic equilibrium is established with more
vapor at higher temperature.
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How Humid is it?
Variation in saturation mixing ratio with
changing air temperature (at 1000 mb).
Variation in saturation vapor pressure with
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changing air temperature.
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How Humid is it?
Relative humidity
Most familiar measure
Compares amount of water vapor present to amount that would be
present if air were saturated
Relative humidity (RH) can be computed from vapor pressure or
mixing ratio
RH = [(vapor pressure)/(saturation vapor pressure)] x 100
RH = [(mixing ratio)/(saturation mixing ratio)] x 100
At constant temperature and pressure, RH varies directly with vapor
pressure (or mixing ratio)
If the amount of water vapor in the air remains constant, relative
humidity varies inversely with temperature (next slide)
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How Humid is it?
The vapor pressure varies only slightly through the day so the relative
humidity varies inversely with temperature; the relative humidity increases
as the temperature drops and decreases as the temperature rises.
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How Humid is it?
Dewpoint
Temperature to which air must cool, at
constant pressure, to reach saturation
At dewpoint, air reaches 100% relative humidity
Greater concentration of water vapor, then
higher dewpoint
With high relative humidity, the dewpoint is closer
to the current temperature than with low relative
humidity
Dew is small drops of water that form on
surfaces by condensation of water vapor
If the dewpoint is below freezing, frost may
form on the colder surfaces through deposition
– frost points20
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How Humid is it?
Average surface dewpoint for July.
Average surface dewpoint for January.
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How Humid is it?
Precipitable water
Depth if all water vapor in a vertical column was condensed into liquid
Condensing all the atmosphere’s water vapor would produce a layer of
water covering the entire Earth’s surface 2.5 cm (1.0 in.) deep
Highest in the tropics
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Monitoring Water Vapor
Humidity Instruments
Hygrometer
Measures the water vapor concentration of air
Dewpoint hygrometer
Uses a temperature-controlled mirror and infrared beam
The mirror temperature reaches a point that condensation forms,
reflectivity of the mirror changes, altering the reflection of the
beam: dewpoint
Common at NWS forecast stations
Hair hygrometer
Relates changes in length of a humid hair to humidity
Hair lengthens as relative humidity increases
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Monitoring Water Vapor
Humidity Instruments
Hygrograph
Provides a record of humidity variations over time
Electronic hygrometer
Based on changes in resistance of certain chemicals as they absorb or
release water vapor to the air
The temperature/dewpoint
sensor (hygrothermometer)
used in the NWS’s ASOS.
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Monitoring Water Vapor
Sling psychrometer
Wick is wetted in distilled water
Instrument is ventilated by whirling
Wet-bulb and dry-bulb temperatures
recorded
Dry bulb – actual air temperature
Water vapor vaporizes from the wick as it is whirled and evaporated cooling
lowers the temperature of the wet-bulb temperature
Important to remember – use the depression of the wet bulb on the chart
The difference between the wet and dry bulb temperatures
Aspirated psychrometers do the same, but use a fan instead of whirling
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The difference between the dry-bulb temperature and the wet-bulb
temperature, known as the web bulb depression, is calibrated as a
percentage of relative humidity on a psychrometric table.
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The dewpoint can be obtained from measurements of the
dry-bulb temperature and the wet-bulb depression.
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Monitoring Water Vapor
Long-distance transport of water vapor in a
plume off the Pacific and through Mexico.
Hurricane Irene shown off the East Coast.
Water vapor satellite imagery
IR imagery using infrared wavelengths that detect water vapor
Water vapor imagery indicates presence of water vapor above 3000 m
(10,000 ft); whiter the image, greater the moisture content of the air
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How Air Becomes Saturated
As relative humidity nears 100%
Condensation or deposition becomes more likely
Condensation or deposition forms clouds
Clouds are liquid and/or ice particles
Humidity increases when
Air is cooled
Saturation vapor pressure decreases while actual vapor pressure remains
constant
Water vapor added at a constant temperature
Vapor pressure increases while saturation vapor pressure remains constant
As ascending saturated air (RH ~100%) expands and cools,
Saturation mixing ratio and actual mixing ratio decline, some water vapor
converted to water droplets or ice crystals
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How Air Becomes Saturated
Adiabatic process (Chap 5)
No heat is exchanged between the air parcel and environment
Expansional cooling and compressional heating of unsaturated air
referred to as adiabatic processes if no heat is exchanged with
surroundings
Air cools adiabatically as it rises
Lower pressure with altitude allows air to expand
Unsaturated ascending air cools at 9.8° C/1000 m (5.5° F/1000 ft), it
warms at the same rate upon descent. (dry adiabatic lapse rate)
Upon saturation, air continues to cool, but at the moist
adiabatic lapse rate of 6° C/1000 m (3.3° F/1000 ft)
Rate lower because latent heat released upon condensation partially
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offsets cooling as parcel rises
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Atmospheric Stability
Air parcels are subject to buoyant forces
Caused by density differences between the surrounding air and the
parcel itself.
Atmospheric stability
Property of ambient air that either enhances (unstable) or
suppresses (stable) vertical motion of air parcels
In stable air, an ascending parcel becomes cooler and more dense
than the surrounding air
Causes parcel to sink back to original altitude
In unstable air, an ascending parcel becomes warmer and less
dense than the surrounding air
Causes the parcel to continue rising.
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Atmospheric Stability
Stable air
Movement of parcel up means
it is colder than surrounding air
Sinks down to original altitude
Movement down means it is
warmer than surrounding air
Rises to its original altitude
Stable air inhibits vertical
motion
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Atmospheric Stability
Unstable air
Movement of parcel upward
means it is warmer than the
surrounding air
Continues rising
Movement of the parcel
downward, becomes colder
than the surrounding air
Continues descending
Unstable air enhances
vertical motion
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Atmospheric Stability
Soundings
Temperature profiles of ambient air through which air parcels move
Soundings (and stability) can change due to:
Local radiational heating and cooling
At night, cold ground cools and stabilizes the overlying air
During day, warm ground warms and destabilizes the overlying air
Air mass advection
Air mass is stabilized as it moves over a colder surface
Air mass is destabilized as it moves over a warmer surface
Large-scale ascent or descent of air
Subsiding air generally becomes more stable
Rising air generally becomes less stable
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Atmospheric Stability
Soundings
Absolute instability
Air temperature dropping more rapidly with altitude than
dry adiabatic lapse rate (9.8° C/1000 m)
Conditional instability
Air temperature dropping with altitude more rapidly than
the moist adiabatic lapse rate (6° C/1000 m), but less
rapidly than the dry adiabatic lapse rate
Air layer stable for unsaturated air parcels and unstable for
saturated air parcels
Implies unsaturated air must be forced upward to reach
saturation
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Atmospheric Stability
Absolute stability
Air layer stable for both unsaturated and saturated air parcels
Temperature of ambient air drops more slowly with altitude than moist
adiabatic lapse rate
Temperature does not change with altitude (isothermal)
Temperature increase with altitude (inversion)
Neutral air layer
Rising or descending parcel always has same temperature as
ambient air
Neither impedes nor spurs up or down motion of air parcels
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Air stability is determined by
comparing the temperature
(density) of an ascending air
parcel with the temperature
(density) of the surrounding
air (sounding).
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Atmospheric Stability
A Stüve diagram, with temperature on the horizontal axis, increasing
from left to right, and pressure on the vertical axis, decreasing upward.
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Atmospheric Stability
An unsaturated air
parcel at point A is
subject to a dry
adiabatic
expansion to
point B (850 mb)
and then to point
C (700 mb).
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Atmospheric Stability
A saturated air
parcel at point D
(700 mb) is subject
to a moist adiabatic
expansion to point E
(500 mb) and then
to a dry adiabatic
compression to
point F (700 mb).
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Lifting Processes
Convection Current
Updraft and a downdraft
Cumulus clouds form where
air ascends
Surrounding sky is cloud-free
where air descends
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Lifting Processes
Frontal uplift
When contrasting air masses meet, leads to expansional cooling of
rising air, possible cloud and precipitation development
Warm front – as a cold and dry air mass retreats, warm air advances
by riding up and over the cold air
The leading edge of advancing warm air at the Earth’s surface is the
warm front
Cold front – cold and dry air displaces warm and humid air by sliding
under it, forcing the warm air upwards.
The leading edge of advancing cold air at the Earth’s surface is the cold
front
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Lifting Processes
Oragraphic lifting
Air is forced upward by topography
Ascend above hills, descend into
valleys
Expansional cooling (windward
slope) and compressional warming
(leeward slope) of air affects clouds
and precipitation development
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Lifting Processes
Mean annual
precipitation
(1971-2000) in
the Pacific
Northwest.
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Lifting Processes
Convergent Lifting
When surface winds converge, associated upward motion
leads to
Expansional cooling, increasing relative humidity, possible
cloud and precipitation formation
Example: converging winds are largely responsible for
cloudiness and precipitation in a low-pressure system
Example: converging sea breezes contribute to high
frequency of thunderstorms in central Florida
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