Ø Temperature
̶       
A measure of the average speed that molecules move in a
substance (solid, liquid, gas)
̶       
The average speed of the molecules will increase in the
colder substances and decrease in the warmer substances.
̶       
Temperature is related to the energy of motion of molecules
̶       
Usually decreases rapidly upward away from the earth’s
surface (about 12 km/7 miles)
̶       
Above about 12 km the temp increases with height, then begin
to decrease again about 50 km/31 miles
̶       
Troposphere = layer of air in the lower atmosphere where
temp decreases with height
̶       
Stratosphere = layer above the troposphere where temp
increase with height because of the absorption of the ultraviolet radiation by
ozone in that layer
̶       
Tropopause = boundary between troposphere and stratosphere
̶       
Tropical storms grow to greater heights than storms that
form in the middle of latitude and Polar Regions because the tropopause is
higher in the tropics
Ø Pressure
̶       
Force applied by air on a unit area of surface.
̶       
Equivalent to the weight of a column of the air above a unit
area
̶       
Millibar (mb) = 1,000dynes/centimeter^2 or to a hectopascal
(100 pascals)
̶       
Average pressure at sea level is 1013.25 mb - pressure
decreases rapidly while moving away from the earth’s atmosphere
̶       
Measured with a Barometer–simplest to use is the mercury
barometer
̶       
Measurements are made worldwide every hour
Ø Moisture / Moisture
Variables
̶       
Clouds from water vapor (invisible gas composed of
individual water molecules)
̶       
Water vapor is mixed with other gases in the atmosphere
(such as, nitrogen & oxygen)
̶       
Vapor Pressure =  force per unit area applied by only the water
vapor molecules (ranges from 0 in a cold atmosphere to 60mb in a humid tropical
atmosphere)
̶       
Atmosphere reaches saturation when the invisible
vapor condenses into visible cloud droplets
̶       
Saturation Vapor Pressure = vapor pressure
at which the atmosphere becomes saturated
̶       
The atmosphere's capacity for water vapor (and saturation
vapor pressure) depends on temperature
Ø Phase Changes and
Clouds
̶       
Air contains water vapor and clouds in the air are composed
of liquid and ice particles
·       
Vapor to water = condensation
·       
Water to ice = freezing
·       
Vapor to ice = deposition
·       
Ice to vapor = Sublimation
·       
Water to vapor = evaporation
·       
Solid to liquid = melting
·       
Latent heat = hidden heat required for a phase change
Ø Wind
̶       
The movement of air (direction and speed)
̶       
Anemometer = device to measure wind speed
̶       
Meteorologists depict wind speed and direction using wind
barbs on a staff
Continually
orbit around the earth in the general circulation, the large-scale pattern of
prevailing winds and pressur
 
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