Why Teams call analytics are critical to your entire business
Climate vs Weather
1. DBN 163 :
Building
Environment (I)
CLIMATE
PUAN BALKHIZ BINTI ISMAIL
Department of Building
Faculty of Architecture, Planning & Surveying
UiTM Sarawak
2. Overview
Not every building has the same weather
exposure. Regional climate conditions, macro
environment and micro environment all affect
the risk of moisture damage, and must be taken
into account in design.
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3. Weather
DEFINED AS;
general atmospheric conditions at a given
place and a given time with respect to
temperature, humidity, precipitation,
wind, radiation and other meteorological
events.
OR
a collection of atmospheric phenomena that
occur over some place for a short period of
time (few hours, a week).
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4. Weather (cont’d)
A dynamic process, changing from moment
to moment, from day to night and from
season to season.
The phenomenon – movement of air, the
presence of water vapor, pressure of the
atmosphere and transfer of thermal energy
Described using air temperature, moisture
content/humidity, wind, pressure, cloud
and precipitation.
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6. 6
Monday
Nov 21st
Tuesday
Nov 22nd
Wednesday
Nov 23rd
Thursday
Nov 24th
Friday
Nov 25th
Morning:
Cloudy
Afternoon :
Thunderstorms
Night :
Rain
Morning:
Cloudy
Afternoon :
Thunderstorms
Night :
Rain
Morning:
Cloudy
Afternoon :
Rain
Night :
Rain
Morning:
Cloudy
Afternoon :
Rain
Night :
Cloudy
Morning:
Cloudy
Afternoon :
Rain
Night :
No Rain
Max : 30°C
Min : 23°C
Max : 30°C
Min : 23°C
Max : 30°C
Min : 23°C
Max : 30°C
Min : 23°C
Max : 30°C
Min : 23°C
Weather Forecast for Kuching (Week 3)
7. Climate
Climate (from Greek; klima) is defined as a
region with certain conditions of
temperature, dryness, wind, light and etc.
or
Climate is a statistical composite of
weather conditions for some place
viewed over a long period of time (20 – 30
years).
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8. Climate (cont’d)
More scientific definition of climate is an
integration in time of the physical states
of the atmospheric environment, characteristic
of a certain geographical location.
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11. WEATHER CLIMATE
• Refer to small area
• Short Period
• Change from time to time
• Every place has a different
weather conditions
(e.g : rainy day, sunny day)
• Involves large area
• Long Period
• Doesn’t change – fixed/suits
every area
• Same climate within each area
(e.g : Tropical, Mediterranean)
Weather vs Climate
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15. 1. Quality of Solar Radiation
The earth receives almost all its energy from
the sun in the form of radiations.
Thus, the SUN is the dominating influence
on climate.
Some of the shorter wave length are
absorbed by the atmosphere and radiated
at much longer wave length
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16. 1. Quality of Solar Radiation (cont’d)
☼ According to human means of perception,
we can distinguish :
a. ultra-violet radiation, 290 – 380 nm (producing
photo-chemical effects, bleaching, sunburn, etc)
b. visible light, 380 (violet) – 700 (red) nm
c. short infra-red radiation, 700 – 2300 nm,
(radiant heat with some photo-chemical effects)
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19. 2. Quantity of Solar Radiation
The intensity of radiation reaching the upper
surface of the atmosphere is taken as the
solar constant
The earth moves around the sun in a slightly
elliptical orbit.
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21. 3. Tilt of The Earth’s Axis
☼ The earth rotates around its own axis
(Rotational Axis)
☼ Each complete rotation making a day =
24hour/day (1000 miles/hour)
☼ Due to the tilted position, however, the area
receiving the maximum intensity moves
north and south between the tropic of
Cancer (latitude 23.5ºN) and the tropic of
Capricorn (latitude 23.5ºS).
☼ This is the main cause of seasonal
changes.
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24. 4. Radiation at The Earth’s
Surface
The earth-sun relationship affects the
amount of radiation received at a
particular point on the earth’s surface in
three ways :
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25. 4. Radiation at The Earth’s
Surface
1. The cosine law
which states that the intensity on a tilted surface
equals the normal intensity times the cosine of the
angle of incidence
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β
β
B
C
Figure shows how the same amount of radiation is distributed
over a larger area, therefore less radiation falls on unit area.
26. 4. Radiation at The Earth’s
Surface (cont’d)
2. Atmospheric Depletion
The observation of radiation by ozone,
vapors and dust particles in the atmosphere.
The lower the solar altitude angle, the
longer the path of radiation through the
atmosphere = smaller part reaches
Earth’s surface.
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27. 4. Radiation at The Earth’s
Surface (cont’d)
3. Duration of sunshine
The length of the daylight period
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C
A
B
D
AB > CD
Earth
Atmosphere
Figure above indicates the geometrical relationship between solar altitude
and path of radiation through the atmosphere.
29. Reflection
Can you define climate and weather?
What are the differences of climate and
weather?
Named and explain global climatic factors.
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