Transcript Climate
3/16 WHOT Teaching Point: Objective: To compare light intensity from the sun at various degrees. Responsibilities: Finish lab analysis by the end of class. (vocab Quiz Friday!!!) (Season Project Due Before class!) Warm-up The reason that the Earth has 4 seasons is ___________________ Explain. Latitude – A unit of distance that measures North and south of the Equator Longitude – A unit of distance that measures from East to West from the Prime Meridian Latitude – How we measure it. How do we measure latitude and longitude? degrees. Draw a picture of how we measure latitude with degrees. Latitude Longitude Distance north or south Distance east or west from from the Equator. Equator is 0°. Poles are 90° degrees. Seattle is at approximately 47° north. the Prime Meridian (which runs through Greenwich, England) Prime Meridian is 0°. International date line is at 180° Seattle is at approximately 122° west. Use your data and the idea of solar radiation to explain why… We have a warm equator and cold polar regions Seasons. WHOT Q Describe your results. 3/17 WHOT Teaching Point: Objective: To determine the two primary factors that affect how much insolation Earth gets. Responsibilities: Finish Latitude Graph. Questions Due Thursday. vocab Quiz Friday!!! Insolation Reading Same light, more space to cover. A. Equator B. 60° N Insolation Reading Electromagnetic Radiation travels 93 million miles from the sun to the earth Insolation – Incoming Solar Radiation Insolation Gets to earth as visible light and infrared. 2 reasons we have less solar radiation at the poles: Tilt (surface area) Energy is absorbed by atmosphere • Energy is transported from the equator to the poles by: • Convection • Conduction • evaporation Latitude VS Temperature. 1. Answer quesitons on front. Temperature (C) 2. Graph each city. 3. Find Range 4. Answer Questions In your journal. Temperature of a Place 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 -5 -10 -15 -20 J F M A M J J Month A S O N D WHOT Q How does the latitude of a location effect its climate? 3/18 WHOT Teaching Point: Objective: To differentiate between weather and climate. Responsibilities: Latitude Graph due Thursday. vocab Quiz Friday!!! Warm up: (journals) How would you describe our “climate” here at Hazen High School? Statements Add your statement to the side of the whiteboard you think it belongs. Definitions: Weather: is the day-to-day state of the atmosphere, and its short-term variation in minutes to weeks. Climate: is the weather of a place averaged over a period of time Climate is what you expect, weather is what you get. Climate is what we expect, Weather is what we get. Create a T-chart of the top half of the page. Left column “Weather” Right column “Climate” Copy Down 3 Statements from each. Weather VS Climate Fall here tends to be dry and I will need a warm jacket for the cool The temperature is currently 3°C Our warmest month is August We average 200 inches of snow each winter . There is a hurricane affecting the Gulf Coast. The nighttime low for Wednesday is expected to be 5°C The fog makes driving difficult winter. I need to wear a sweater and long pants today. The leaves are turning colors and falling off the trees earlier this year because the days and nights are cooler than normal. The average temperature in the spring is around 60°C The wind is blowing. NDT Climate VS CvW Cartoon Weather Cosmos https://www.youtube.co m/watch?v=cBdxDFpDp _k https://www.youtube.co m/watch?v=VHgyOa70 Q7Y Moscow D.C. Calcutta Singapore 1. Describe the trend of annual temperature as you increase latitude… 2. Describe what happens to the range of temperatures as your increase your latitude. WHOT Q Weather VS Climate 3/19 WHOT Teaching Point: Objective: Compare the temperatures of inland cities to coastal cities. Responsibilities: vocab Quiz Friday!!! 3/19 Warm-up What are two reasons that the equator is warm and the poles are cold? 1. The equator receives more direct sunlight. 2. There is less atmosphere for the sun’s radiation to go through. Global Monthly Temperatures 35 30 25 Singapore, Calcutta, Washington, Moscow, Malaya India 23°N D.C. 39°N U.S.S.R. 1°N 104°E 88°E 77°E 56°N 37°E Temperature (C) 20 15 10 5 0 -5 -10 -15 Singapore, Malaya 1°N 104°E Calcutta, India 23°N 88°E Washington, D.C. 39°N 77°E Moscow, U.S.S.R. 56°N 37°E January February March April May June July August September October November December Annual Mean Range 27 27 27 28 28 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 1 19 22 26 29 30 29 29 28 28 27 23 19 26 11 2 3 8 13 18 23 26 24 21 14 9 3 14 24 -11 -9 -4 3 12 17 19 17 11 4 -2 -8 4 30 Graph the annual temperature of your two cities on a piece of graph paper in your science journal (just like you did for latitude.) Make sure to: Label your graphs appropriately (title, axis titles, key, etc) Answer the following questions in your journal. USE COMPLETE SENTENCES. 1. What is the difference between your two cities? Which city has a higher temperature? The lowest? Which has a higher range? 2. They are both in very similar latitudes. Why do you think there is such a large difference between the two? Find a partner with 5. Is there a pattern different cities. Write down your new cities. 3. Which of their cities had higher temperature and range? 4. Where were they located? between the temperatures between your pair of cities and your partners cities even though they were in different locations? Come up with an explanation why! The city inland has more extreme temperatures Water makes climate more mild. Water takes a very long time to heat or cool Think of the ocean like a rechargeable climate battery In the summer the ocean January temp is 45 stores energy… In winter it releases it. July temp is 53 The energy stored in the Places by the ocean will have cooler summers and warmer winters. ocean regulates climate to make it less extreme WHOT Q water & climate. Specific Heat Water takes 4.18 (energy units) to fill up one battery bar. Land takes .84 to fill up the same bar. Celebration of Knowledge: Seasons Quiz Match the definitions with the appropriate words, then turn to finish the other side of the quiz. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. __F__Seasons __A__Latitude __D__Longitude __E_ Rotation __C__Orbit __G__Revolution __B__Solstice __H__Insolation Use these Definitions for 1-8 A. A unit of measurement that measures the distance North of South of the equator. B. The longest and shortest days of the year. C. The curved path of a celestial object or spacecraft around a star, planet, or moon. D. A unit of measurement that measures the distance east and west of the Prime Meridian E. Spinning around a central axis. F. Subdivision of a year. We have 4: spring, summer, autumn, winter. G. The period of time it takes for an object in space to completely travel the path of its orbit. H. The amount of incoming solar radiation, or amount of sunlight that is received. 9. __J__Summer Solstice 10. __K__Solar System 11. __L__Equinox 12. __M__Vernal Equinox 13. __N__Autumnal Equinox 14. __P__Weather 15. __O__Climate 16.__I__Winter Solstice Use these Definitions for 9-16 I. J. K. L. M. N. O. P. The first day of winter For the Northern Hemisphere: When the tilt of the Earth is directly facing the sun. A star and all of the planets and objects that orbit it. The first day of spring and fall when the day is the same length as the night. The day is just as long as the night in the spring. The first day of autumn. The weather of a place averaged over a period of time The day-to-day state of the atmosphere, and its short-term variation in minutes to weeks.