06 Thermal Processes
06 Thermal Processes
06 Thermal Processes
Radiation Processes
reflected solar radiation 107 W m2 Incoming solar radiation 342 W m2 Outgoing longwave radiation 235 W m2 40 30
Absorbed by atmosphere
67 24 Reflected by surface 30 168
Absorbed by surface thermals Evapotranspiration
78
350 40
back radiation
324
24
78
390
Surface radiation
324
Absorbed by surface
2
Adiabatic Processes
An adiabatic process is one in which no energy enters or leaves the system. Many atmospheric processes are adiabatic (or nearly so) particularly those involving the vertical movement of air.
Air is a poor thermal conductor, and mixing often slow enough for a body of air to retain its identity distinct from the surrounding air during ascent.
Adiabatic Processes:
Ascent of convective plumes Large scale lifting/subsidence Condensation/evaporation within an airmass
Non-Adiabatic Processes:
Radiative heating/cooling Surface heating/cooling Loss of water through precipitation Addition of water from evaporation of precipitation falling from above
Lapse Rate
Lapse Rate is the term given to the vertical gradient of temperature. The fall in temperature with altitude of dry air that results from the decrease in pressure is called the Dry Adiabatic Lapse Rate = -9.8C/km.
Dry Adiabatic Lapse Rate
Altitude
1km
9.8C Temperature
Condensation releases latent heat, thus saturated air cools less with altitude than dry air. There is no single value for the saturated adiabatic lapse rate. It increases as temperature decreases, from as low as 4C/km for very warm, tropical air, up to 9C/km at -40C.
Altitude
Temperature
cool
warm
P0
A column of air has pressure levels P1, P2, etc. If the column is warmed, the air will expand and its density at any given level decrease. The vertical interval between pressure levels increases, so that at any given altitude the pressure in the warmer column is greater than in the cooler. N.B. since the total mass of air in the column is constant, the pressure at the surface does not change
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H warm cool
H L
cool
L warm
Mid-latitude low-pressure cells have colder air to the rear. As a result, the axis of the low slopes towards the colder air
Cold low
Warm high
High pressure cells slope towards the warmest air aloft. The centre of the cell at 3000m may be displaced 10-15 towards the equator.
Cold low
Warm high
1. Start with a horizontally uniform pressure distribution. Solar radiation starts to warm land. Air near surface is warmed by land, convection mixes warm air upwards and whole boundary layer warms.
2. Air over land warms and expands. Cant expand sideways, so column expand upwards produces high pressure aloft. N.B. Surface pressure remains constant at this stage. cool
cool
warm
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3. Horizontal pressure gradient aloft drives a flow from over land to over ocean. H
cool
warm
cool 4. Mass of air in column over land is reduced surface pressure falls to produce a surface low. High pressure aloft weakens, but is maintained by continued heating at surface. Surface pressure gradient drives flow from sea to land: the sea breeze.
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cool
L warm
cool
5. When solar heating stops, pressure driven flows act to equalize pressure, restoring conditions to the initial uniform pressure field. If land cools sufficiently at night, the reverse situation can be established. Over large land masses there may be insufficient time over night for the sea breeze to reach regions far from the coast, and a weak surface low is maintained over night. This then deepens during the following days, and a heat low may be maintained for days or weeks, until synoptic conditions change.
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Sea Breeze
Formation of local thermal low over land, results in the formation of a sea-breeze In-flowing cool air from sea forms a sea-breeze front a miniature cold front Air ahead of the front is forced upward, contributing to the formation of cumulus.
950 mb 975 mb 1000 mb
25C
15C
14
15
SLP (mb) & 1000-500 thickness : 48hr forecast valid 0000 040922
ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting 16
17
SLP (mb) & 1000-500 thickness (dm) : 36hr forecast valid 0000 040930
ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting 18
SLP (mb) & 1000-500 thickness (dm) : analysis valid 0000 040930
ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting 19
2C
12C
850 mb Temperature (2C contours), RH (%), wind (m s-1) : analysis valid 0000 040930
ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting 20
Surface temperature (2C contours) and SLP (mb)(5mb contours) : analysis valid 0600 040930
ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting 21
cold
LOW
warm
500mb
HIGH
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5580
LOW 0
VG500
VT 5760
5700
60
120 Contours of 1000 mb surface 180
5820
HIGH
HIGH
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Note that cold air is to the left of the thermal wind vector (looking along wind) in the northern hemisphere, to the right in the southern hemisphere. The decrease in temperature towards the poles results in a westerly thermal wind in the upper atmosphere in both hemispheres.
The largest meridional temperature gradient occurs in mid-latitudes across the polar front. The thermal wind makes up a significant component of the jet-stream, located over the upper part of the polar front.
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