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Showing posts with label inversion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label inversion. Show all posts
Thursday, October 12, 2017
Hypothetical Lapse Rates on a Skew-T Diagram
Labels:
autoconvection,
conditionally,
diagram,
dry,
hypothetical,
inversion,
isothermal,
lapse,
meteorology,
moist,
neutral,
rate,
rates,
skew-t,
stable,
superadiabatic,
unstable,
weather
Friday, March 18, 2016
Focus on the Environment and Social Impacts: Radiation Inversions and Human Activities
Understanding Weather and Climate (7th Edition) (MasteringMeteorology Series) by Edward Aguado, James E. Burt
Labels:
activity,
climate,
environment,
human,
impacts,
inversion,
meteorology,
radiation,
social,
weather,
wind
Tuesday, July 21, 2015
Adiabatic Lapse Rates
What do you know about the
Wet Adiabatic Lapse rate?
-
Less
than dry adiabatic lapse rate
The more it slants = greater lapse rate
Lapse rate = Rate of cooling
What’s
the difference between the Dry and Wet Adiabatic Lapse Rate?
-
Unsaturated
à reaches LCL
à Saturated
- Latent “Hidden” heat - The heat either released or
absorbed as a result of a change of state.
-
When
a cloud forms….
o
The
water vapor reaches the LCL à Temperature decreases à It’s doing work à slows the rate of cooling
-
Water
vapor condenses à latent heat is released
Mixing ratio (w) - A measurement of the amount of
water vapor in the air of a given sized quantity of dry air. Grams of vapor per
kilogram of dry air.
W = Water vapor in the box
- Dewpoint Lapse Rate = As it goes up it
decreases = 2 deg C / km
-
Dew point (Td) - The temperature to which air must cool at constant pressure in
order for air to reach saturation (commonly dew to form); indicates moisture
content.
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