Transcript Ch 17 Sec 2
Ch 17
Section 2
Weather
Atmospheric pressure
Atmosphere presses down on you with the equivalent
to one kilogram per square centimeter.
Pressure is caused by gas molecules colliding with each
other and your skin.
Pressure decrease as altitude increases
Air is thinner in upper atmosphere
Oxygen decreases as altitude increases
Air planes are pressurized due to this decrease
Global winds and pressure
systems
Weather patterns
result from complex
global patterns of
wind and pressure.
Westerlies- winds that
blow from the west in
the middle latitudes
Tradewinds blow from
the east in the tropics
Jetstreams
Jetstreams control many weather processes, such as
storm development.
12 km above surface
Can travel 500km/h
Moves north and south with seasons
High and Low pressure
systems
Subtropical Highs are relatively stable belts of high
pressure near latitudes of 30°.
Coriolis Effect
When air rises with low pressure and sinks with high
pressure systems.
Air Masses and Weather
Fronts
Air masses can be polar or tropical and continental or
maritime.
Air masses interact in zones called weather fronts.
Warm and cold fronts create different types of
precipitation.
Thunderstorms
A cumulonimbus cloud can have ice crystals at the top
of the cloud can sometimes form hail.
Downdrafts and Squalls
The falling rain can sometimes bring cool air with it; the
sinking air current is called a downdraft.
When a downdraft hits the earth’s surface and spreads
out as windy gusts; it is called a squall.
Downbursts
When downdrafts hit the surface and spread out very
violently.
Wind can reach speeds of 260 km/h
Tornadoes
Intense, short-lived, violent, localized storms that occur
in the mid latitudes.
Tornadoes
Can move at speeds of 50 km/h across surface
Wind speeds in funnel can reach 400 km/h
Hurricanes
Tropical storms that cover vast areas and last for days
At 118 km/h winds; tropical depression is upgraded to
hurricane.
Western pacific hurricanes are called Typhoons.