All Study Guides Atmospheric Science Unit 5
🌦️ Atmospheric Science Unit 5 – Atmospheric Moisture and CloudsAtmospheric moisture plays a crucial role in weather patterns and climate. This unit explores humidity, cloud formation, and precipitation processes, providing insights into how water vapor influences atmospheric dynamics and energy transfer.
Understanding atmospheric moisture is essential for weather forecasting and climate studies. From the water cycle to cloud classification and precipitation mechanisms, this topic connects various aspects of atmospheric science and their impacts on Earth's systems.
Key Concepts and Definitions
Humidity measures the amount of water vapor present in the atmosphere
Saturation occurs when the air cannot hold any more water vapor at a given temperature
Dew point temperature when air becomes saturated and condensation begins
Relative humidity ratio of actual water vapor content to the maximum possible at a given temperature
Condensation process of water vapor changing to liquid water, often forming clouds or fog
Evaporation conversion of liquid water into water vapor, driven by heat energy
Occurs from water surfaces, soil moisture, and plant transpiration
Sublimation direct transition of water from solid (ice) to gas (water vapor) without passing through the liquid phase
Latent heat energy released or absorbed during phase changes of water
The Water Cycle and Atmospheric Moisture
Water cycle continuous movement of water through the Earth system, driven by solar energy
Includes evaporation, transpiration, condensation, precipitation, and runoff
Evaporation adds moisture to the atmosphere from oceans, lakes, rivers, and soil
Rate depends on temperature, wind speed, and humidity
Transpiration release of water vapor from plants through stomata in leaves
Atmospheric circulation transports water vapor from source regions to other areas
Condensation forms clouds and precipitation, releasing latent heat
Precipitation (rain, snow, hail) removes moisture from the atmosphere
Runoff and groundwater flow return water to oceans and lakes, completing the cycle
Atmospheric moisture content varies with temperature, pressure, and air mass characteristics
Types of Humidity and Measurement
Absolute humidity mass of water vapor per unit volume of air (g/m³)
Specific humidity ratio of water vapor mass to total air mass (g/kg)
Mixing ratio mass of water vapor per unit mass of dry air (g/kg)
Relative humidity percentage of actual water vapor pressure compared to saturation vapor pressure at a given temperature
Varies with temperature changes even if absolute moisture content remains constant
Dew point temperature at which air becomes saturated and condensation begins
Directly related to absolute moisture content
Wet-bulb temperature lowest temperature achieved by evaporative cooling, depends on humidity
Psychrometer instrument that measures wet-bulb and dry-bulb temperatures to determine humidity
Hygrometer device that directly measures humidity using changes in electrical resistance or capacitance of a moisture-sensitive material
Cooling of air to its dew point temperature leads to condensation and cloud formation
Adiabatic cooling occurs when air rises and expands due to lower pressure
Common in convection, orographic lift, and frontal wedging
Conductive cooling from contact with cold surfaces (e.g., ice, snow, cold water)
Radiative cooling loss of heat to space during clear nights
Mixing of air masses with different temperatures and humidity levels
Condensation nuclei tiny particles (dust, salt, smoke) that provide surfaces for water vapor to condense upon
Hygroscopic nuclei (salt) attract water vapor and enhance condensation
Updrafts lift air parcels, causing cooling and increasing relative humidity
Cloud droplets form when relative humidity exceeds 100% and condensation occurs on nuclei
Ice crystals form at temperatures below freezing through deposition or freezing of cloud droplets
Cloud Classification and Characteristics
Clouds classified by altitude, shape, and composition
High clouds (above 6 km) include cirrus, cirrostratus, and cirrocumulus
Composed of ice crystals due to cold temperatures
Middle clouds (2-6 km) include altostratus and altocumulus
May consist of water droplets, ice crystals, or a mixture
Low clouds (below 2 km) include stratus, stratocumulus, and nimbostratus
Primarily composed of water droplets
Vertical development clouds (cumulus, cumulonimbus) span multiple altitude ranges
Associated with strong updrafts, convection, and precipitation
Cloud cover reported in oktas (eighths) or percentages
Cloud opacity varies from transparent (cirrus) to opaque (nimbostratus)
Cloud thickness and density affect solar radiation and Earth's energy balance
Precipitation Types and Mechanisms
Precipitation forms when cloud droplets or ice crystals grow large enough to fall due to gravity
Coalescence merging of cloud droplets through collision, forming larger drops
Efficient warm rain process in tropical and maritime clouds
Bergeron process ice crystal growth at the expense of water droplets due to lower saturation vapor pressure over ice
Dominant precipitation mechanism in mixed-phase clouds
Riming accumulation of supercooled water droplets on ice crystals, forming graupel or hail
Rain liquid precipitation with drop diameters greater than 0.5 mm
Drizzle small, uniform liquid drops with diameters less than 0.5 mm
Snow solid precipitation composed of ice crystals or aggregates
Forms in cold clouds or when falling through subfreezing air
Sleet ice pellets that form when falling snow partially melts and refreezes
Hail large, layered ice particles that form in strong updrafts of thunderstorms
Precipitation intensity measured in millimeters per hour or inches per hour
Atmospheric Stability and Moisture
Stability refers to the atmosphere's resistance to vertical motion
Stable conditions suppress vertical mixing and cloud development
Characterized by strong inversions and poor air quality
Unstable conditions promote rising motion, convection, and cloud growth
Associated with cumulus clouds, thunderstorms, and precipitation
Conditional instability potential for instability if air becomes saturated
Moisture content affects stability by modifying air density and lapse rates
Moist adiabatic lapse rate (MALR) cooling rate of saturated rising air, typically ~5°C/km
Dry adiabatic lapse rate (DALR) cooling rate of unsaturated rising air, ~9.8°C/km
Environmental lapse rate (ELR) actual temperature change with height in the atmosphere
Comparing ELR to MALR and DALR helps determine atmospheric stability
Latent heat release during condensation warms the air and increases instability
Weather Patterns and Forecasting
Atmospheric moisture plays a crucial role in weather systems and patterns
High humidity and instability favor thunderstorm and heavy precipitation development
Low humidity and stable conditions promote clear skies and fair weather
Moisture convergence zones (ITCZ, monsoon troughs) are regions of enhanced cloudiness and rainfall
Orographic precipitation occurs when moist air is forced up mountain slopes
Frontal systems (cold, warm, occluded) often bring cloudiness and precipitation
Tropical cyclones (hurricanes, typhoons) form over warm, moist oceans and transport heat and moisture poleward
Numerical weather prediction models simulate moisture transport and phase changes
Moisture data from radiosondes, satellites, and surface stations improve forecast accuracy
Ensemble forecasting accounts for uncertainty in moisture and stability conditions
Long-term moisture patterns influence drought and flood risk assessment