Transcript Chapter_7
Chapter 7:
Atmospheric
Circulations
By the end of this chapter you should:
Understand the scales of motion
Be able to give an example of an eddy
Have an understanding of the general circulation
of the atmosphere
Scales of Atmospheric
Motions
Scales of motion – different sizes of circulation
Microscale – smallest scale of motion. 2 meters or
less and last seconds to minutes
Mesoscale – circulation around a city (20 km). Can
last minutes to hours
Synoptic scale – Circulations around highs and lows
(2,000 km). Can last many days
Planetary scale – Circulations around the entire
Earth.
Scales of Atmospheric
Motions
Scales of Atmospheric
Motions
Eddies - Big and Small
Eddy – a circulation formed downwind from an object
(examples?)
Rotor – rotation formed downwind from a mountain wave
Wind shear –
change of wind
speed or
direction with
height
Thermal Circulations
Thermal circulations
Circulations brought
on by changes in air
Temperature.
Sea and Land Breezes
Types of thermal circulations
Sea breeze (scale of motion?)
Land breeze
Sea breeze front – leading
edge of the sea breeze
Florida sea breezes can have
huge walls of clouds. Make for
great gliding due to vertical
movement
Sea and Land Breezes
Seasonally Changing Winds the Monsoon
Monsoon wind system – “monsoon” means seasonal
Asian monsoon – in winter the land is much colder than
ocean. In summer, opposite is true
Seasonally Changing Winds the Monsoon
Mountain and Valley Breezes
Valley breeze – explain this
Mountain breeze – explain this
Katabatic Winds
Katabatic winds – in general, any wind that flows
downhill
Perfect scenario is elevated plateau with mountains
around
Bora – katabatic
wind in the Adriatic
Sea
Chinook (Foehn) Winds
Chinook winds – fierce wind that flows on the eastern
slope of the Rockies.
Compressional heating – main source of the heat
from the Chinook. Air descends very rapidly and
warms
Chinook wall cloud – a bank of clouds forming over the
mountains
Santa Ana Winds
Santa Ana wind
Warm, dry wind that
originates from the
Desert. Usually needs
a high in the Great
Basin
Compressional heating
Fans huge wildfires
Desert Winds
Dust storms – formed by surface winds that form from
surface heating. Wind picks up dust
Dust devils – Formed from combination of surface
heating, unstable atmosphere, and an obstacle in the
way
General Circulation of the
Atmosphere
General circulation only represents the average
circulation
Why are the prevailing winds in Hawaii northeasterly
and in san Jose northwesterly?
Cause: unequal heating of the earth’s surface
Effect: atmospheric heat transport
Single-cell Model
Basic assumptions
Covered with water
Sun is always over equator
Earth does not rotate
Hadley
Heat
cell
at the equator
creates a low that
brings heat to the
poles aloft
Single-cell Model
Why is the single-cell model wrong?
Earth has the Coriolis force. In this model, all winds
would be easterly. We know that is wrong
So let’s spin
the planet.
Three-cell Model
Model for a rotating earth - keep first two assumptions
Hadley cell is still apparent
Doldrums – equatorial region where winds are light.
Warm air rises, condenses and moves laterally towards
the poles
Subtropical highs – convergence of air aloft creates
highs at 30 degrees. Major deserts and horse latitudes.
Trade winds – some of the surface air from the
Subtropical highs move back to the equator and deflect
due to the Coriolis force.
Intertropical convergence zone – converge of the trade
winds from both hemisphere to get rising air and
thunderstorms
Three-cell Model
Westerlies – some of the air from the Subtropical highs
move towards the poles and deflect towards the east
Polar front – the boundary between the mild air towards
the equator and the cold air near the pole (Subpolar lows)
Polar easterlies – air behind the polar front that is
deflected to the west by the Coriolis force
Fig. 7-21, p. 185
Average Surface Winds and
Pressure: The Real World
Semipermanent highs and lows – two areas of highs and
lows per hemisphere
Bermuda high & Pacific high
Icelandic low & Aleutian low
Siberian high
Fig. 7-22a, p. 188
Fig. 7-22b, p. 189
The General Circulation and
Precipitation Patterns
Where would you expect regions of high and low
precipitation?
Heavy precipitation
Regions close to ITCZ,
polar fronts, subpolar
lows
Westerly Winds and the Jet
Stream
Jet streams – regions of very fast-moving air in the upper
atmosphere due to high pressure at the equator and low
pressure near the poles
Winds and Upwelling
Upwelling – rising of cold water from below
Wind flow parallel to the coastline is deflected to the right
by what force? Cold water replaces this
El Niño and the Southern
Oscillation
El Niño – a natural event that occurs around Christmas.
Upwelling weakens along the west coast of South
America. Major events can cause great hardship
Southern Oscillation – seasaw pattern of high and low
pressures switching on opposite sides of the Pacific
Ocean
La Niña – cold water episodes opposite El Niño
El Niño and the Southern
Oscillation
Other Atmosphere-Ocean
Interactions
North Atlantic Oscillation
Arctic Oscillation
Pacific Decadal Oscillation