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Explore the composition, characteristics, and layers of Earth's atmosphere, learn about air pressure, temperature variations, and the role of gases. Discover how the thermosphere does not feel hot and why the atmosphere is vital for life on Earth.
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Characteristics of the AtmosphereTerms: atmosphere, air pressure, troposphere, stratosphere, mesosphere, thermosphere
Characteristics of the Atmosphere • Describe the composition of Earth’s atmosphere. • What does the name of each atmospheric layer mean? • Why doesn’t the thermosphere feel hot?
The Composition of the Atmosphere • The atmosphere is a mixture of gases that surrounds Earth. • Makes conditions on Earth suitable for living things • Gases keep the atmosphere on Earth’s surface warm enough for water to exist as a liquid, protects against dangerous radiation, prevents Earth’s surface from being hit by most meteoroids or chunks of rock from outer space. • Gases • Nitrogen 78% • Oxygen 21% • Other gases 1% • Water vapor <1% • Solids • Dust, volcanic ash, salt, dirt, smoke • Liquids • water
Atmospheric Pressure and Temperature • As altitude increases, air pressure decreases • Air pressure is strongest at Earth’s surface because more air is above you. • Atmospheric composition affects air temperature • Temperature differences result from the way solar energy is absorbed as it moves through the atmosphere • High % of gases that absorb solar energy= warmer • Less gases that absorb solar energy = cooler
Layers of the Atmosphere • Based on temperature changes: • Troposphere: layer in which we live; contains almost all of the weather, carbon dioxide, water vapor, clouds, air pollution, and life-forms • Stratosphere: gases are layered and don’t mix; contains the ozone layer; protects life by absorbing harmful UV radiation • Mesosphere: middle layer; the coldest layer; most meteoroids burn up here, producing meteoroid trails • Thermosphere: temperature increases; does not feel hot; outer most part of atmosphere; no definite outer limit
Summary • Nitrogen and oxygen make up most of Earth’s atmosphere. • Air pressure decreases as altitude increases. • The composition of atmospheric layers affects their temperature. • The troposphere is the lowest atmospheric layer. It is the layer in which we live. • The stratosphere contains the ozone layer, which protects us from harmful radiation. • The mesosphere is the coldest atmospheric layer. Meteoroids burn up in this layer. • The thermosphere is the uppermost layer of the atmosphere.
#1 Quick Check • Why does the temperature of different layers of the atmosphere vary? • Because air temperature increases as altitude increases • Because the amount of energy radiated from the sun varies • Because of interference by humans • Because of the composition of gases in each layer
#2 Quick Check What is the most abundant gas in the atmosphere? • oxygen • hydrogen • nitrogen • carbon dioxide
#3 Quick Check A major source of oxygen for the earth’s atmosphere is a. sea water. b. the sun. c. animals d. plants
#4 Quick Check The bottom layer of the atmosphere where almost all weather occurs, is the • stratosphere • troposphere • thermosphere • mesosphere
#5 Quick Check The ozone layer is located in the • stratosphere • troposphere • thermosphere • mesosphere
Heat and Weather Patterns • Weather climate • visible light air masses • sea breeze Convection currents • Density land breeze
What is weather? What is climate? What is a sea breeze? What is a land breeze? What are air masses? Heat and Weather Patterns
Heat and Weather PatternsWeather and Climate • Weather is the process in the atmosphere that changes over a short period of time. • Climate is the weather that is in place most of the time or over a long period of time. • Is it Climate or Weather? • What’s the weather like most of the time where you live?
The Sun’s Energy • Nearly all the energy in Earth’s atmosphere comes from the sun. • Most of the energy from the sun reaches Earth in the form of visible light and infrared radiation, with a small amount of ultraviolet radiation. • Visible light is energy you can see.
The Sun’s Energy • Earth changes infrared radiation into heat energy. • Ultraviolet radiation causes sunburns, skin cancer, and eye damage. • Some of the sun’s energy reaches Earth’s surface and is reflected back into the atmosphere. • Some of the energy is absorbed by the land and water and changed into heat.
The Sun’s Energy • Land heats up and cools down faster than water. • Water heats up more slowly than land does, but holds the heat longer. • Air heats up unevenly. • Warm air becomes less dense and rises. • Cooler air becomes more dense and sinks.
The Sun’s Energy • Wind that blows from an ocean or lake onto land is known as a sea breeze. • The flow of air from land to a body of water is called a land breeze. • Convection currents transfer heat from one place to another through a liquid or a gas. • In Earth’s atmosphere, convection currents carry warm air upwards and cool air downwards. • This is because of the uneven heating of Earth’s surface.
The Sun’s Energy • Huge chunks of warm and cold air are called air masses. • Air masses move sideways across continents and oceans. • Clouds and storms form when these masses run into each other. • When a cold air mass meets a warm air mass, thunderstorms may appear.
Quick Check Land absorbs radiation from the sun • A. slower than water. • B. faster than water. • C. at the same rate as water. • D. almost never.
Quick Check In the atmosphere, what happens in a convection current? • A. cool air and warmer air both rise • B. cool air and warmer air both fall • C. cool air rises and warmer air falls • D. cool air falls and warmer air rises
Quick Check What does solar (infrared) radiation produce on Earth? • A. light • B. heat • C. land • D. water
Quick Check In which direction does a sea breeze move? • A. toward the land • B. toward the sea • C. up • D. down
Quick Check How are climate and weather alike? • A. They both occur over short periods of time. • B. They both occur over long periods of time. • C. They both are affected by radiation from the sun. • D. They are both caused by even heating of Earth’s surface.
What are Air Masses and Fronts?(Chapter 16 Section 2) • Terms: air mass, front, cyclone, anticyclone,
What are air masses and fronts?P. 490 • What are the major air masses that influence the weather in the U.S.? • What is one source region of a maritime polar air mass? • What are the characteristics of an air mass whose two-letter symbol is cP? • What are the four major types of fronts?
Air Masses • Air masses are large bodies of air where temperature and moisture content are constant throughout. • Moisture content and temperature of a mass are determined by the area over which the air mass forms. • These areas are called source regions.
Types of Air Masses • maritime (m) – forms over water; wet • Continental (c) – forms over land; dry • Polar (P) – forms over the polar regions; cold • Tropical (T) – develops over the tropics; warm
Cold Air Masses • Three polar air masses: • Continental polar (cP) forms over northern Canada; brings extremely cold weather during winter; brings cool dry weather during summer • Maritime polar (mP) forms over North Pacific Ocean; cool, very wet; rain and snow during winter; foggy during summer • Maritime polar (mP) forms over North Atlantic Ocean; cool, cloudy and precipitation during winter; mild, cloudy during summer.
Warm Air Masses • There are three warm air masses that affect the U.S. • Maritime tropical (mT) forms over warm water in the Pacific ocean • (mT) forms over the Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic Ocean; brings hot, humid weather and hurricanes and thunderstorms during the summer; In winter, brings mild, cloudy weather • Continental Tropical (cT) forms deserts of Mexico and Southwestern U.S.; brings clear, hot, dry weather during summer
Fronts • The boundary between air masses of different densities and different temperatures • Cold Front – cold air moves under warm air; brings thunderstorms • Warm Front – warm air moves over cold air; brings drizzly rain followed by clear and warm weather.
Fronts • Occluded Front – warm air mass is caught between two colder air masses. Brings cool temperature and large amounts of rain. • Stationary Front – cold air mass meets warm air mass; remain separate; not enough energy to move warm air above cold air mass; can bring many days of cloudy, wet weather.
Air Pressure and Weather • Cyclones – areas in the atmosphere that has lower pressure than the surrounding areas and has winds that spiral toward the center. Brings clouds and rain. • Anticyclones – the rotation of air around a high pressure center in the direction opposite to Earth’s rotation. Brings dry, clear weather.
Quick Check • What kind of front forms when a cold air mass displaces a warm air mass? A. a cold front B. a warm front C. an occluded front D. a stationary front
Quick Check A maritime tropical air mass contains A. cold, dry air. B. warm, dry air. C. warm, wet air. D. cold, wet air.
Quick Check • A front that forms when a warm air mass is trapped between two cold air masses and is forced to rise is a(n) A. stationary front. B. occluded front. C. warm front. D. cold front.
Global Wind Systems and Weather Events • Global Winds Tornadoes • Thunderstorms Cumulonimbus clouds • Low density High density • Low pressure High pressure • Air pressure
What combination of air produces global winds? What makes global winds curve rather than move in straight lines? What properties of air near the ground are likely to produce a thunderstorm? What combination of properties describes cold air? How would you distinguish between local winds and global winds?
Global Winds • Wind is the horizontal movement of air from an area of high pressure to an area of low pressure. • All winds are caused by differences in air pressure. • Local winds are winds that blow over short distances. • Local winds are caused by unequal heating of Earth’s surface within a small area.
Global Winds • The unequal heating of Earth’s atmosphere by sunlight produces global winds. • The combination of high-pressure polar air and low-pressure equatorial air produces global winds. • The angle at which sunshine strikes Earth’s surface in MAINLY responsible for the unequal heating of Earth’s surface.
Global Winds • Air moves from areas of high pressure to areas of low pressure. • Dense, high-pressure air over the poles sinks and moves towards the low-pressure air over the equator. • Less dense, low-pressure air over the equator rises and moves toward the poles. • These movements of air are global winds. • Earth’s spin on its axis makes these winds move along a curved path (Coriolis effect). • Northern Hemisphere global winds curve clockwise. • Southern Hemisphere global winds curve counterclockwise.
Tornadoes and Thunderstorms • Differences in air pressure can also produce powerful local winds and storms. • The low density, warm air will form clouds when it reaches colder air in the sky. • As low density moisture rises high in the sky, it may freeze into particles that are electrically charged. • These charged particles can produce lightning and thunder.
Tornadoes and Thunderstorms • Moist, low pressure air near the ground produce thunderstorms. • Thunderstorms form within large cumulonimbus clouds, also known as thunderheads. • Tornadoes are swiftly turning, very low-pressure funnels of air. They produce the fastest moving winds on Earth. • Tornadoes develop in low, heavy cumulonimbus clouds. • Most likely to occur in spring and summer , often in the late afternoon when the ground is warm. • Tornadoes occur more often in the U.S. than in any other country.
Quick Check What combination produces global winds? • A. low-pressure polar air and low-pressure equatorial air • B. low-pressure polar air and high-pressure equatorial air • C. high-pressure polar air and high-pressure equatorial air • D. high-pressure polar air and low-pressure equatorial air
Quick Check What is MAINLY responsible for the unequal heating of Earth’s surface? • A. the distance of the sun from different parts of Earth • B. the angle at which sunshine strikes Earth’s surface • C. the material on Earth’s surface • D. changes in the amount of energy the sun puts out
Quick Check What makes global winds curve rather than move in straight lines? • A. differences in air pressure • B. differences in density • C. differences in temperature • D. Earth’s rotation on its axis
Quick Check What properties of air near the ground are likely to produce a thunderstorm? • A. moist, low pressure • B. dry, low pressure • C. moist, high pressure • D. dry, high pressure
Quick Check Which combination of properties describe cold air? • A. high density and low pressure • B. low density and low pressure • C. high density and high pressure • D. low density and high pressure
Heat and Weather Patterns • Tropical storms Hurricanes • Tropical depression • Clockwise Counterclockwise • Eye of a hurricane