Basic Navigation LO6
Download
Report
Transcript Basic Navigation LO6
Basic Navigation
Lecture 6
ACP32 Vol2
Basic Navigation
By the end of this lecture you should
understand:
Weather
Fronts
Cloud Types
Weather
Much of the weather in Britain is caused by massive
areas of air at differing pressures.
To visualise pressure
areas on a chart or map
meteorologists join
areas of the same
pressure together in
a line, an ISOBAR.
Weather
Think of Isobars as contour lines on a map.
Steep/concentrated Isobars indicate high winds.
Shallow, spaced out Isobars indicate slower moving
air.
Areas of LOW pressure, depressions, bring
unsettled weather.
Areas of HIGH pressure, anti-cyclones, bring calm
weather.
Fronts
When masses of cold air and warm air meet a
FRONT occurs.
The COLD air/front will bring poor weather.
The WARM air/front will bring stable weather.
Fronts
COLD and WARM air meet and the warm rises.
Fronts
As the WARM air rises the cold rushes underneath and
begins a spin.
Fronts
WARM air is trapped above the cold, spinning stops and the
front dissipates. This is now known as an OCCLUDED Front
Fronts
In an OCCLUDED Front both the WARM and
COLD air are present in the same space
Fronts
Similar to a front is an Anticyclone
This is a mass of high pressure air
creating light winds that spin clockwise (in
the northern hemisphere) around the
centre of high pressure.
They are stable slow moving systems,
consisting of warm dry air, bringing long
periods of fine clear weather.
Cloud Types
There are 3 main types of cloud:
1 Cirrus high altitudes and composed of ice
crystals. The word cirrus means a thread or
hair.
2 Cumulus a lumpy or fluffy cloud.
3 Stratus a featureless layer of cloud.
Cloud Types
These three words can be used to describe
distinct types of clouds.
The words cumulus and stratus on their
own identify clouds whose base is below
2000m.
Cumulus may be combined with nimbus
(Latin for rain), to give cumulonimbus - a
heaped rain cloud.
A layer of cloud from which rain is falling is
nimbostratus.
Cloud Types
Cloud Types