Transcript Radiation
Atmospheric Stability
Terminology I
Hydrostatic Equilibrium
– Balance, in the vertical,
between PGF and gravity
– The general state of the
atmosphere
– Net force (in the vertical)
on air parcels is very near
zero over a large area
Atmospheric Stability: Terminology II
Stable Equilibrium (“Stable” atmosphere)
– When a parcel is moved upward or downward,
forces act to return it to it’s original altitude
(bowl with ball in it)
– Vertical motions are
restricted
– Stratiform cloudiness
(stratus)
Atmospheric Stability Terminology III
Unstable Equilibrium (“Unstable” atmosphere)
– When a parcel is moved upward or downward,
forces act to accelerate it away from it’s original
altitude (upside-down bowl with ball on top)
– Vertical motions enhanced
– Cumuliform cloudiness (cumulus)
Atmospheric Stability Terminology IV
Lapse Rate: the rate of decrease of air
temperature with increasing elevation
Environmental Lapse Rate: the lapse rate of
the atmosphere. We use the environmental
lapse rate to determine atmospheric
stability.
Atmospheric Stability Terminology V
Dry Adiabatic Lapse Rate
– The rate at which a rising, unsaturated parcel cools
– 5.5 deg F per 1000 feet of ascent (10 deg C per km)
– The rate at which a sinking, unsaturated parcel
warms (conservation
of energy)
Atmospheric Stability Terminology VI
Moist Adiabatic Lapse Rate
– The rate at which a rising, saturated parcel cools
– Approximately 3.3 deg F per 1000 feet of ascent (6
deg C per km)
– Why is the moist rate less than the dry rate?
CONDENSATION releases energy into rising parcel
– The rate at which a sinking, saturated parcel
warms, although sinking parcels are rarely
saturated
EVAPORATION requires energy (cooling process), so the
rate of warming is slowed as parcel descends
Atmospheric Stability
Rising (sinking) air
MUST cool (warm) at
either the dry or moist
lapse rates- it’s the law
(of physics)!
Think about a hot-air
balloon and why it rises
Stability and the Environmental Lapse
Rate: Unstable Equilibrium
Unstable Equilibrium: rapid cooling with height
– Environmental temperature decreases faster than
5.5 deg F per 1000 feet (10 deg C per 1000 m)
– If parcels forced to rise they remain warmer than
their surroundings
Parcel and surrounding environment at same pressure
Parcel will be warmer and thus less dense than air
around it and will be buoyant
The larger the temperature difference (parcel warmer) the
faster it will rise, because it will be much less dense than
its surroundings
Stability and the Environmental Lapse
Rate: Stable Equilibrium I
Stable Equilibrium: slow or no cooling with height
– Environmental temperature decreases slower than
3.3 deg F per 1000 feet (6 deg C per 1000 m)
– If parcels forced to rise they become colder than
their surroundings
Parcel and surrounding environment at same pressure
Parcel will be colder and thus more dense than air around
it and will sink back to original position if upward forcing
(convergence into low pressure, orography) ceases
This does not mean that air in a stable atmosphere will
not rise (or sink)!
Stability and the Environmental Lapse
Rate: Stable Equilibrium II
Inversion: extremely stable- warming with
increasing height
– Environmental temperature increases as altitude
increases
– If parcels forced to rise they become much colder
than their surroundings
At ground level
– Nocturnal: ground cools faster than air above (clear, calm night)
– Cool bodies of water (daytime, spring and summer)
Aloft (above the ground)
– Tropopause: boundary between troposphere and stratosphere
– Subsidence (high pressure, sinking air)
Graphical Examples
Stability and Mixing (Air Pollution)
Instability (unstable)
– Promotes rising and sinking
air (vertical motion)
– Mixes air from aloft down to
ground, which means
generally cleaner air
(unless there are tall
smokestacks around )
Stability (stable)
– Promotes stratification
– Little mixing, so junk put
into the air stays in area
– Also, rapid changes in wind
speed and direction can
occur over small vertical
distance
Stability and Mixing (Wind Speed)
Stability: Typical Clear Early Morning
– Coolest near ground, still relatively warm aloft. Promotes stratification
(no vertical mixing)
– With little mixing, air in contact with ground slows (winds die down)
– Also, rapid changes in wind speed and direction can occur over small
vertical distance
Instability: Typical Sunny Afternoon
– Very warm near ground, still relatively cool aloft. Promotes rising and
sinking air (vertical mixing)
– Mixes fast moving air from above (no friction) with slow-moving air near
ground
Key Figures
8.6, 8.7, 8.8, 8.15, 8.17, 8.20, 8.21, 8.26,
8.27, 8.51, 8.54
Cloud Atlas, Wave Clouds