Transcript Chapter 04
Chapter 4: Humidity,
Condensation and
Clouds
Circulation of water in the atmosphere
Evaporation, condensation and saturation
Humidity
Dew and frost
Fog
Foggy weather
Clouds
Circulation of Water
in the Atmosphere
Q: do we have more water vapor in the hot, `dry’ air
the Sahara desert than in the cold, `damp’ polar air?
(A: yes and no, depending on the type of humidity
we mean)
Circulation of Water in the
Atmosphere
evaporation
condensation
Precipitation
Runoff
hydrologic cycle
• The total amount of water vapor stored in the
atmosphere amounts to only one week’s supply of
precipitation for the planet.
Fig. 4-1, p. 80
Evaporation, Condensation
and Saturation
•Saturation
saturation is more likely
to occur in cool air
•Evaporation is increased
by
stronger wind;
Higher T
Evaporation, Condensation and
Saturation
condensation nuclei
• In very clean air, about 10,000 condensation nuclei
are typically found in one cubic centimeter of air,
a volume approximately the size of your fingertip.
• Condensation occurs
primarily when the air
is cooled
Humidity
•Water vapor density (absolute
humidity (kg/m3)
•Specific humidity (kg/kg)
•Mixing ratio (kg/kg)
•Vapor pressure (mb)
•Relative humidity
Vapor Pressure
actual vapor pressure
saturation vapor pressure
• “Saturation” describes a condition of equilibrium:
liquid water is evaporating at exactly the same rate that
water vapor is condensing.
The actual values are
Also provided in Table
B.1 on p. 440.
Fig. 4-5, p. 83
Relative Humidity
definition of relative
humidity:
vapor pressure divided by
saturation vapor pressure
saturation and
supersaturation
relative humidity and
temperature
Fig. 4-7, p. 85
Relative Humidity and Dew
Point
dew point temperature
• The It is the T to which air would have to be cooled (with
no change in air pressure and moisture content) for
saturation to occur
• Higher Td indicates higher water vapor content
dew point depression (T – Td) and relative
humidity
Higher (T – Td) indicates lower RH
Ta = -2C
Td = -2C
Ta – Td = 0C
RH = 100%
Ta = 35C
Td = 10C
Ta – Td = 25C
RH = 21%
Fig. 4-9a, p. 87
Relative Humidity and Human
Discomfort
wet bulb temperature
Tw: attained by evaporating water into the air;
a good measure of how cool the skin can become
Td: reached by cooling the air to saturation;
a good measure of actual vapor content
Heat index
• “It’s not the heat, it’s the humidity” - both temperature and
relative humidity contribute to warm-weather discomfort.
Fig. 4-10, p. 89
Measuring Humidity
Psychrometers
Wet-bulb T (Tw);
Dry-bulb T (Ta);
wet-bulb depression (Ta-Tw);
Find Td and RH (based on
Table D on p. 443-446) for
Ta = 20C, Ta-Tw = 5C; or
Ta = 90F, Ta-Tw = 10F
Hygrometers
hair hygrometer and electrical hygrometer: RH
infrared hygrometer and dew cell: moisture content;
dew-point hygrometer (for ASOS)
Dew and Frost
dew
frost
frost point and deposition
• Frost is one of the few examples of deposition in nature.
Fog
radiation fog:
cooling from ground
advection fog:
warm, moist air over cold surface
upslope fog: cooling
evaporation (mixing) fog
when moist air from your mouth or nose
meets the cold air and mixes with it
haze: hygroscopic (`water
seeking’) condensation nuclei
allows water vapor to condense
when RH is below 100%
Foggy Weather
coastal vs. interior areas
hazard to aircraft
• Some airports use fog-dispersal equipment.
Clouds
The cloud chart is provided at the end
of the textbook
Classification of Clouds
major cloud types
low, middle, high, vertical
cloud appearance
sheetlike, puffy, wispy, rain cloud
cloud base
0-2 Km, 2-6 km, 6-10km
• It’s easy to identify clouds, but it takes practice.
The ability to identify clouds allows you to forecast
many aspects of the weather using nothing but your
eyes.
Table 4-2, p. 98
High Clouds
Cirrus: thin, wispy
Cirrocumulus: small, white puffs
Cirrostratus: usually thin, often producing a halo
• Cirrostratus clouds can sometimes be quite thick.
Middle Clouds
Altocumulus: gray, puffy (larger, darker than Cc)
Altostratus: gray layer cloud with `watery sun’
(difference from Cs: darker, dimly visible, no ground
shallows)
Low Clouds
Nimbostratus
dark gray with light rain
Stratocumulus:
larger cloud elements with
lower cloud base than Ac
Stratus
uniform grayish cloud;
has a more uniform base than
Ns;
has a lower base and dark gray
than As;
Clouds with Vertical
Development
Cumulus: puffy, floating `cotton’ with flat base
cumulus congestus: line of towering Cu
Cumulonimbus: thunderstorm with anvils
• Not all cumulus clouds grow to be thunderstorms, but
all thunderstorms start out as cumulus clouds.
Some Unusual Clouds
lenticular clouds:
lens-like; UFO
Pileus: `cap’
mammatus clouds:
baglike
Contrails: condensation
trail from engine exhaust