Water in the Atmosphere. Essential Points 1.Water is part of the atmosphere 2.Partial pressure,...

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Transcript of Water in the Atmosphere. Essential Points 1.Water is part of the atmosphere 2.Partial pressure,...

Water in the Atmosphere

Essential Points1. Water is part of the atmosphere2. Partial pressure, vapor pressure and

humidity3. Condensation and Clouds4. Why it Rains5. Hail, Snow and other forms of water

Water in the Atmosphere

• Water vapor makes up 0-4% of the atmosphere

• Most variable component• Residence time of a water molecule in the

atmosphere = 10 days

1. Water is part of the atmosphere

Partial Pressure

• The pressure that would be exerted by each gas in the atmosphere if all the other gases were removed

• Proportional to the number of molecules present

2. Partial pressure, vapor pressure and humidity

Partial PressureGas Molecular

WeightPartial

PressureNitrogen 28 78%

Oxygen 32 21%

Argon 40 0.9%

Water Vapor 18 0-4%

Carbon Dioxide

44 350 ppm

2. Partial pressure, vapor pressure and humidity

Vapor Pressure

2. Partial pressure, vapor pressure and humidity

Vapor Pressure• The pressure of gas necessary to keep a

liquid or solid from evaporating• The pressure of a substance in the

atmosphere in equilibrium with a solid or liquid

• If partial pressure > vapor pressure, material condenses

• If partial pressure < vapor pressure, material evaporates

2. Partial pressure, vapor pressure and humidity

Vapor Pressure of Water0 C 32 F 6 mb

10 C 50 F 12 mb

20 C 68 F 23 mb

30 C 86 F 42 mb

40 C 104 F 74 mb

50 C 122 F 123 mb

2. Partial pressure, vapor pressure and humidity

Vapor Pressure and Humidity• The higher the vapor pressure, the more

moisture the air can hold• Vapor pressure increases with temperature• If partial pressure (water vapor actually in

air) stays constant, then –– Humidity decreases as it gets hotter– Humidity increases as it gets cooler

• Cooler temperatures can actually be less pleasant

2. Partial pressure, vapor pressure and humidity

Boiling Water

• When the vapor pressure of water = atmospheric pressure, water boils

• Since air pressure drops with altitude, so does the boiling point of water

2. Partial pressure, vapor pressure and humidity

Boiling Point of Water0 km 100 C 212 F5 km 83C 181 F10 km 73 C 163 F15 km 55 C 131 F20 km 40 C 104 F25 km 26 C 79 F30 km 14 C 57 F

2. Partial pressure, vapor pressure and humidity

Partial Pressure and Vapor Pressure

• Partial pressure = Pressure water vapor actually exerts

• Vapor pressure = Pressure water vapor could exert if the atmosphere were saturated

• Most of the time the partial pressure is less than the vapor pressure

2. Partial pressure, vapor pressure and humidity

Adiabatic Expansion

• Adiabatic = No heat transfer• Air warms or cools solely by expansion or

compression• Why? Expansion does work, energy comes

from internal heat• Dry air: 10 C/1000m (5.5 F/1000 feet)• Moist air: 6 C/1000m (3.3 F/1000 ft)

3. Condensation and Clouds

Lapse Rate and Stability• If air cools faster with altitude than

10C/km, it is unstable• If air cools 6-10 C/km with altitude, it is

stable for dry air but not moist air• If air cools less than 6 C/km with altitude, it

is stable• If air is warmer at high altitude than at the

surface, it is inverted and extremely stable

3. Condensation and Clouds

“Inverted?”• If warm air rises, why is it an “inversion” to

have warm air above cooler air?• Because normally, heating at the surface

keeps air at the surface warmer• That’s why the troposphere is “tropo”• Warm air above is more stable, but also

less common

1. Water is part of the atmosphere

Cloud Formation• Most cloud droplets require nuclei to form• Most nuclei are hygroscopic (attract water)• It is much easier to form water droplets

than ice crystals

3. Condensation and Clouds

Why Don’t Clouds Fall Down?

It’s a matter of Terminal Velocity – the faster things fall, the more air resistance they meet

• Skydiver – 50 m/sec • Mouse – 5 - 10 m/sec• Cloud droplet – 1 cm/sec

– The tiniest air motions keep such small particles suspended

3. Condensation and Clouds

Orographic Effects

• Orographic Lifting– Clouds– Precipitation

• Rain Shadows• Katabatic Winds• Chinook or Foehn Winds

3. Condensation and Clouds

Orographic Effects

3. Condensation and Clouds

Rain Forest, Washington

3. Condensation and Clouds

Rain Shadow, Nevada

3. Condensation and Clouds

Why Does it Rain?• Cloud droplets are about 1/100 mm in

diameter• It takes over a million cloud droplets to

make one raindrop• Coalescence of cloud droplets? Too Slow

4. Why it Rains

The Bergeron Process• Molecules are less tightly bound in liquids

than in solids• Therefore vapor pressure of water is

greater than that of ice• When ice and water droplets are present,

water vapor can be saturated with respect to water droplets but supersaturated with respect to ice

• Therefore water can evaporate from droplets and freeze onto ice.

4. Why it Rains

Freezing Rain

4. Why it Rains

Hail• Often associated with violent storms• Typically 1 cm or less• Can be 10 cm – capable of causing major

damage• Stones typically show concentric structure• Probably form by repeated trips through

supercooled regions

5. Hail, Snow and other forms of water

5. Hail, Snow and other forms of water

5. Hail, Snow and other forms of water

5. Hail, Snow and other forms of water

1. Water is part of the atmosphere

1. Water is part of the atmosphere

1. Water is part of the atmosphere

Record Hailstone, SD 2010

1. Water is part of the atmosphere

Fog

• Radiation: Surface cools at night by radiation

• Advection: Warm air carried over cool surface

• Upslope: Small-scale orographic clouds• Steam: Warm water evaporates into cold

air

5. Hail, Snow and other forms of water

Advection Fog, Labrador

5. Hail, Snow and other forms of water

Upslope Fog

1. Water is part of the atmosphere

Steam Fog

1. Water is part of the atmosphere

Frost

5. Hail, Snow and other forms of water

Ground Frost

5. Hail, Snow and other forms of water

Ice Shove

5. Hail, Snow and other forms of water

“Candle Ice”

5. Hail, Snow and other forms of water

Pancake Ice

5. Hail, Snow and other forms of water

Essential Points1. Water is part of the atmosphere2. Partial pressure, vapor pressure and

humidity3. Condensation and Clouds4. Why it Rains5. Hail, Snow and other forms of water