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Abney Elementary
Mrs. Delaup
The atmosphere is a thin blanket of air that
surrounds the Earth.
There are four layers of the atmosphere.
The layer closest to the Earth is the
troposphere. We live in the troposphere and
breathe in air. Almost all weather happens in
this layer.
Some airplanes that travel long distances fly in
the stratosphere, above the weather.
The mesosphere is the coldest layer of the
atmosphere.
The thermosphere is the hot, outermost layer
of air.
An air mass is a large body of air that has
temperature and moisture similar to that of
the area over which it formed. Ex: A warm,
moist air mass is most likely to form over the
Gulf of Mexico.
Humidity is the amount of water vapor in the
air.
A front is the area where two air masses meet
and where weather happens.
A cold front forms when a cold air mass
catches up with a warm air mass.
A warm front forms when a warm air mass
catches up to a cold air mass.
A cold front is represented with a line with
triangles.
A warm front is represented with half circles.
Cirrus clouds are a wispy white cloudS at a high
altitude.
Cumulus clouds are dense, white, fluffy, puffy
cotton-ball clouds.
Cumulonimbus clouds are towering dark clouds.
If you see them it will probably rain soon.
Stratus clouds form a low layer of dark gray.
You see these clouds on a gray cloudy day.
Air pressure(the weight) is measured with an
instrument called a barometer.
A thermometer measures the temperature of
air.
An anemometer measure wind speed.
A wind vane or wind sock measures wind
direction.
The water cycle is the constant recycling of
water from Earth’s surface to the atmosphere
and back to the Earth’s surface again.
Evaporation is the process in which liquid
changes into a gas.
Condensation is the process in which a gas
changes to a liquid.
Precipitation is rain, snow, sleet, or hail that
falls from the clouds. Precipitation forms when
water droplets get too large to stay in the
air/clouds.