Weather elements: Relative humidity, clouds, rainfall Flashcards

1
Q

Define relative humidity

A
  • ratio of actual amt of water vapour in air
  • compared with max amt of water vapour a unit of air can hold at that given temp
  • Saturated air: 100% humidity
  • knowing how near air is to being saturated is impt in forecasting chances of precipitation
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2
Q

Relative humidity eqn

A

actual amt of water vapour in air(g/m3)/max amt of water vapour air can hold(g/m3) x 100%

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3
Q

Relationship between humidity and temp

A
  • relative humidity decreases as temp increases
  • warm air can hold more water vapour than cool air
  • temp increase, amt of water vapour stays same (assumption)
  • rise in temp makes air ability to hold water vapour to increase (air expands) , RH falls
  • temp affects humidity (not other way round)
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4
Q

Define saturation

A
  • occurs when air is carrying max amt of water vapour it can hold at the given temp
  • RH 100%
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5
Q

Define dew pt temp

A
  • temp at which saturation occurs
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6
Q

Define condensation

A
  • process in which cooled water vapour changes into water droplets (change of state)
  • more water vapour in air, more condensation occur, clouds form, more likely to rain
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7
Q

Define clouds

A
  • visible mass of water droplets/ice crystals suspended in atmosphere
  • water droplets eventually grow large enough to fall onto earth’s surface as precipitation
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8
Q

How are clouds formed?

A
  • earth’s surface heated up, water converted into water vapour via evaporation
  • vapour rises, starts to cool
  • water vapour cools to dew pt temp , condensation occurs if there are condensation nuclei for the water vapour to condense on (e.g. dust particles)
  • water droplets (and dust particles) in air bump into each other, become larger thru process called coalescense
  • form clouds
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9
Q

How are clouds formed?

A
  • earth’s surface heated up, water converted into water vapour via evaporation
  • vapour rises, starts to cool
  • water vapour cools to dew pt temp , condensation occurs if there are condensation nuclei for the water vapour to condense on (e.g. dust particles)
  • water droplets (and dust particles) in air bump into each other, become larger thru process called coalescence
  • form clouds
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10
Q

Define precipitation

A
  • refers to water in any form that falls frm atmosphere to surface of earth
  • e.g. rain, snow, sleet (mixture of both), hail
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11
Q

Air instability

A
  • tendency of air to rise rather than stay in its original position
  • cooler air, denser, sinks and remains near ground
  • thus cool parcel of air is stable
  • air heated, expands, less dense than surrounding air, rises
  • thus this heated parcel of air is unstable
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12
Q

Types of rainfall

A
  1. Convectional rainfall

2. Relief rainfall

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13
Q

Convectional rainfall characteristics

A
  • occurs when there is intense heating of earth surface
  • falls over small area (few square kilometres)
  • usually heavy, short lived
  • accompanied by lightning and thunder
  • late afternoon , early evening
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14
Q

How is convectional rainfall formed?

A
  1. air parcels near surface heated up by sun
  2. air becomes unstable, expands and rises rapidly
  3. air parcels cool as they rise, rching dew pt temp (saturation pt: 100% RH)
  4. condense at dew pt temp , rain-bearing clouds formed
  5. droplets get large and heavy, falls as convectional rain
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15
Q

Relief rain characteristics

A
  • occurs mainly in plcs where moist air frm sea forced to rise above/ over landforms
  • e.g. mountain range
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16
Q

How is relief rain formed?

A
  1. moist warm air frm ocean rises up windward side of mountain, forced to cool
  2. temp of air rches dew pt, condensation occur, clouds form
  3. water droplets large and heavy enough, fall as rain on windward side of mountain where air has risen up
  4. other side of mountain range is leeward side, dry as most of moisture fallen at windward side
  5. descending air warmed up by heat near earth surface, becomes dry wind
  6. dry condition of air on leeward side called “rain shadow” effect e.g. Death Valley, California (Sierra Nevada mountain range)
17
Q

How is relative humidity measured?

A
  • sling psychrometer (dry, wet bulb thermometer)
  • dry bulb: normal thermometer giving air temp
  • wet bulb: fine muslin cloth wrapped,container of water beneath (keep bulb moist)
  • air not saturated, water evaporate from muslin (vice versa)
  • evaporation cause bulb to cool, mercury contract, temp of thermometer drop
18
Q

How to interpret sling phychrometer readings

A
  • calculate diff of dry and wet bulb readings (wet bulb depression)
  • refer to table
19
Q

Anomaly in calculating RH

A

-air conditioner (sucks moisture out frm air)

20
Q

What does RH data indicate

A
  • larger wet bulb depression, RH low
  • inverse relationship
  • no wet bulb depression/diff, RH is 100% (saturated, evaporation didn’t occur)