Chapter 19 presentation
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Chapter 19 The Atmosphere in
Motion
Page 412
What special gear is the hang glider
wearing?
What force is keeping the hang glider aloft?
What other kind of activities depend on this
force?
What causes winds?
Chapter 19.1
Air Pressure and the Wind
What is air pressure?
A column of air that reaches from sea level
to the tom of the atmosphere pushes down
at 147lbs per square inch
Air pressure – is the weight of the overlying
atmosphere
It is exerted in all directions
Force pushing on your body is balanced
by your body pushing out
The higher you go into the atmosphere the lover
the pressure
Barometers – used to measure air pressure
– Aneroid – evacuated can with read outs
attached and barograph
– Mercury p 414
Units of air pressure
– inches or millimeters – used to read mercury
– millibars used on weather maps – these are
adjusted to sea level pressure due to altitude
differences
Why does air pressure Change
Elevation – higher up less air pressure
Temperature – the warmer (more spread
out) the less Air P.
Water Vapor – the more water vapor the
lower the A.P. – H2O molecules weigh
less than the N & O molecules in the air
Isobars – lines of equal pressure –
closed isobar forms a closed lop on a
map
If pressure increases toward center it is a
High Pressure Center
Low pressure center – pressure is lower
Pressure Gradient – how close the isobars
are. Close together – large gradient
What makes the wind blow
Difference in A.P. – the greater the
difference the faster the winds. The closer
the isobars the faster the wind
A wind blows form High P. to low P.
– e.g. Hot air on an island rises (form L.P.) Cool
air from the water (H.P) rushes in, this is known
as a sea breeze
Measuring surface wind direction
and speed.
Wind vane – measure the direction from
which the wind is blowing – Winds are
named by the direction they come from
– e.g. westerly or sea breeze
Anemometer – measure wind speed
Chapter 19.2
Factors affecting Wind
Coriolis Effect
If the earth did not spin and was perfectly smooth air would
flow strait from high pressure areas (poles) directly to low
pressure areas (equator)
Coriolis effect causes objects traveling freely over the
earth to curve
– In n. hemisphere curve right
– In s. hemisphere curve left
– The effect is greater near the poles
– The effect is also greater in long diastase travel vs.
short travel
– The effect increases with increased speed
Friction – with the earth’s surface slows winds
down. The smooth surface(water) the faster
wind can blow the higher coriolis effect
The coriolis effect is a strong factor in determining
wind direction as is a Pressure gradient speed
Coriolis causes winds to blow counter
clockwise in a low, clockwise in high
Jet stream – swift winds due to low friction – direct
path of storms
Global Wind Patterns
Non rotating earth would allow warm air to rise at the
equator, move to the poles and sink to travel back to the
equator, resulting in large circulation cell
The coriolis effect (Rotation of earth) prevents this from
happening
3 cell circulation model
Weakness of 3Celled model
– gives simplified view of circulation between 30 and
60
– No effect given to continents or season
– Simplifies upper level winds
B. Description of Wind and
Pressure Belts
ITCZ (intertropical convergence zone) occurs at the
equator
– hot and humid with little or no wind
– rain is common
– historically been called the doldrums
Between 20 and 35 air sinks forming subtropical highs,
location of earth’s deserts. Known as horse latitudes
Between the doldrums and the horse latitudes are the
easterly trade winds
– Warm and steady (speed and direction) winds
Chapter 19.3
Continental and Local Winds
Effects of Seasons and
continents
Seasons, land masses and topography causes
winds to vary from global patterns depicted in the
3 cell model
Hot air above land in summer creates lowpressure. Cold air above oceans in summer
creates high pressure
– e.g. Atlantic Highs bring winds off the ocean into
the eastern sea board. Winter is reversed
Monsoons – winds caused by seasonal pressure
changes
Local winds – extent 100 km or less include
sea breeze, land breeze, mountain breeze
and valley breeze
Sea – land breeze - During day land is
warmer creating low pressure above`
causes the cool air (H) to blowing from
the water (sea) and night it reverse
Mountain Breeze – at night the air
against the mountain cools more than
the surround air and sinks down hill
Valley breeze – mountain heats the air
causing it to rise and the air from the
valley flows up hill