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Air Pressure and Winds

Air Pressure and Winds. Earth Science Ch. 19. 19.1 Understanding Air Pressure. Variations in air pressure generates winds. Winds can bring changes in temperature and humidity Air pressure in measured in atmospheres (ATM). Measuring Air Pressure.

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Air Pressure and Winds

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  1. Air Pressure and Winds Earth Science Ch. 19

  2. 19.1 Understanding Air Pressure • Variations in air pressure generates winds. • Winds can bring changes in temperature and humidity • Air pressure in measured in atmospheres (ATM)

  3. Measuring Air Pressure • When meteorologists measure atmospheric pressure they use a unit called millibars (mb). • Standard sea level pressure is 1013.2 mb. • A barometer is a device used for measuring air pressure. • A barometer measures air pressure in inches of mercury. • Standard air pressure at sea level when measured in inches of mercury is 29.92.

  4. An aneroid barometer can also be used to measure air pressure. • An aneroid barometer uses a metal chamber with some air removed. This chamber is sensitive to changes in air pressure.

  5. Factors Affecting Wind • Wind is the result of horizontal differences in air pressure. • Air flows from areas of high pressure to low pressure. • The unequal heating of Earth’s surface generates pressure differences. • Solar radiation is the ultimate energy source for most wind.

  6. There are 3 factors that combine to control wind: • Pressure differences • The greater the differences in air pressure the greater the wind speed • Differences in air pressure are shown on a weather map using isobars. • Isobars are lines on a map that connect points of equal pressure. • Winds always blow from high pressure to low pressure.

  7. Coriolis Effect • The change in directions of wind caused by the Earth’s rotation. • All winds are deflected to the right in the Northern hemisphere and to the left in the Southern hemisphere.

  8. Friction • Friction slows air movement which changes wind direction • The changing terrain of the of the earth’s surface causes friction

  9. The Jet Stream • The most prominent airflows high above the friction layer are the jet streams. • Jet streams are fast moving rivers of air that travel in a west to east direction and impact the weather of the US

  10. 19.2 Pressure Centers and Winds • Lows • Cyclones • Pressure decreases at the surface. • Counterclockwise • Air flows inward and converges. • Air rises • Clouds and precipitation. • Highs • Anticyclones • Pressure increases at the surface • Clockwise • Air sinks and flows outward. • Clear skies and good weather.

  11. Global Winds • The cause of wind is the unequal heating of Earth’s surface • Tropical regions receive more solar radiation than the poles. • The atmosphere balances these differences by moving warm air toward the poles and cool air toward the equator.

  12. Each hemisphere has 3 convection cells • These 3 cells are called Hadley cells, Ferrel cells, and Polar cells • The winds in each cell move from high to low pressure.

  13. Equitorial Low • Air rises at the equator • A lot of precipitation due to cooling and condensing of rising air • Caused by convergence of the trade winds • Intertropical convergence zone (ITCZ) • Occurs near the equator (within 5° N and S) • Also known as the doldrums due to lack of air movement • Location where trade winds come together

  14. Subtropical Highs • Air sinks at around 30° north and south latitude • Dry conditions, common locations of deserts • The sinking air moves outward from the high • Winds created from the Subtropical Highs • Trade winds – move toward the equator • Prevailing westerlies – move toward the poles, directly effect our weather in the U.S. • Sometimes referred to as the horse latitudes • Sailors would throw horses overboard in order to conserve water.

  15. Subpolar low • Air that rises at around 60° north and south • Caused by convergence of the prevailing westerlies and polar easterlies • Polar high • Air that sinks at the poles • The polar easterlies are created by the sinking air • The polar easterlies move from the polar high to the subpolar low

  16. 90° 60° 30° 0° 30° 60° 90°

  17. In polar regions cold polar air sinks and spreads toward the equator. • These cold winds interact with the warm winds coming from the equator • The interactions of these air masses produces a stormy belt in the middle latitudes called the polar front.

  18. 19.3 Regional Wind Systems • Local winds are caused by either changes in topography or by differences between land and water. • There are 2 types of local winds: • Land and Sea Breezes • Valley and Mountain Breezes

  19. Land and Sea Breezes • During the day the land is heated more than the water. • The air above the land rises creating an area of low pressure • The air over the water is cooler and more dense creating an area of high pressure • A sea breeze develops as the high pressure air over the water replaces the low pressure air over the land • The breeze comes from the sea which gives the name

  20. At night the reverse takes place • The air over the water is warmer than the air over the land • The low pressure air over the water rises and is replaced by the high pressure air from the land • The breeze comes from the land which gives the name

  21. Valley and Mountain Breezes • During the day the air on the slopes of mountains is warmer than the air over the valley • The breeze moves up the slope because the air is less dense • A valley breeze forms because the air is rising from the valley up the slope

  22. At night the pattern reverses • The air along the mountain slopes cools • The cool air is more dense so it sinks from the slopes into the valley • This is called a mountain breeze

  23. How wind is measured • Winds are always labeled with the direction that are coming from • The instrument most commonly used to determine wind direction is a wind vane • Wind vanes always point into the wind • Wind directions can either be given by points on a compass (N, S, E, W) or on a degree scale • 0° – North, 90° – East, 180° – South, 270° - West

  24. Wind Direction • When the wind consistently blows from one direction it is called a prevailing wind • In the US the westerlies consistently move weather from west to east across the continent • Wind Speed • An anemometer is an instrument used to measure wind speed • When an anemometer is used to measure wind speed the speed is measured from a dial much like a speedometer. • A wind sock can be used to determine both wind direction and wind speed.

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