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Clouds

By: Reland Saugling
https://earthscience-in-
the-
nationalparks.wikispace
                           Orographic Lifting
s.com/Death+Valley

    • As elevated terrain act like barrier to
      air, orographic lifting occurs.
    • Clouds and precipitation are created when air
      goes up a terrain, then adiabatic cooling
      occurs.
    • when air gets to the leeward side, most of the
      moisture is gone, if air descend it make
      condensation and precipitation unlikely.
Frontal wedging
• Frontal wedging is when cool air and warm
  collide
• Weather producing fronts have to do with
  specific storm system such as middle latitude
  cyclones

http://www.ldeo.columbia.edu/BRG/ODP/ODP/LE
G_SUMM/171A/leg171A.html
Convergence
• Convergence is when different air masses
  collide and forces air to be lifted upward.
• Takes place in lower atmosphere.
• Convergence leads to adiabatic cooling and
  clouds forming.

  http://ww2010.atmos.uiuc.edu/(Gh)/gui
  des/mtr/cld/dvlp/cnvrg.rxml
Localized Convective Lifting
• When unequal heating of Earth’s surface causes
  pockets of air to be warmed more than surrounding
  air.
• Thermal are warmer parcels of air that will rise
  because they are less dense.
• When warm parcels of air rise above condensation
  clouds form and clouds create mid-day rain .

http://santasusana.org/pakelly/ES9CP/ES9%2
0clouds.htm
Stability
• Stable air stays in the same position while unstable
  air will rise until it reaches an altitude were the
  surrounding clouds are the same temperature.
• Most stable position is temp. inversion
• Air temp. increase with height because of radiation
  cooling off of earths surface
  http://ocw.usu.edu/Forest__Rang
  e__and_Wildlife_Sciences/Wildlan
  d_Fire_Management_and_Plannin
  g/Unit_7__Atmospheric_Stability_
  and_Instability_1.html-
  skinless_view.html
Condensation
• Takes place when water vapor changes to a
  liquid in the air.
• Air must be saturated for condensation to
  happen.
• In forms of dew, fog, or clouds.

http://www.weatherquestions.com/What_is_conde
nsation.htm
Types of clouds
• Classified by form and height.
• Cirrus clouds-thin, white, seen in patches
• Stratus- clouds that appear to look like sheets
  that cover the sky
• Cumulus- look like dooms, consist of round
  independent masses
 http://www.enchantedlearning.com/subjects/as
 tronomy/planets/earth/clouds/
High clouds
• 6000 meters and higher
• Cirrus, cirrostratus, and cirrocumulus
• Thin and white and often made up of ice
  crystals


http://10.85.0.4:8080/ibreports/ibp/bp.html
?fn=Students&fp=1&ip=10.182.1.107&ibip=1
0.85.0.4&ldu=0&re=0&bu=commons.wikime
dia.org/wiki/File:High_Clouds_seen_from_M
aui.JPG&bc=Website%20contains%20prohibit
ed%20Adult%20Oriented%20content.
Middle Clouds
• Forms from 2000 to 6000 meters
• Types alto cirrus, altostratus, and
  altocumulus
• Altocumulus is larger and denser while
  altostratus clouds create a uniform of
  grayish sheets that cover the sky with
  sunlight seen through.
                         http://www.allstar.fiu.edu/aero/flte
                         nv3.htm
Low Clouds
• Forms 2000 meters and below
• Types Stratus, Stratocumulus, and
  Nimbostratus
• Cloud are fog like and cover most of the
  sky, and sometime produce light precipitation

               http://www.capetownskies.com/clouds-low.htm
Clouds of Vertical Development
• Clouds that do not fit into
  any height range, base is in
  low height range while
  everything else is extended
  upwards.
• Clouds are associated with
  unstable air.
• Cumulus clouds may grow
  upwards and form clouds
  with great vertical range.
                                 http://www.pilotfriend.com/a
• End result cumulonimbus        v_weather/meteo/clouds.htm
  clouds with thunderstorms .
Fog
                                 http://www.photoshopstar.c
                                 om/photo-effects/how-
                                 create-fog-effect-
• Clouds and fog have similar    photoshop/
  appearance and structure.
• Fog is a cloud that has its
  base really close to the
  ground.
• Fog forms from the result of
  radiation cooling,
  movement of air over a cold
  surface, and when water
  vapor is added to bring
  saturation.
Warm Cloud
• Collision-coalescence process form rain droplets in warm
  clouds
• It is when water absorbing particles remove water vapor from
  the air at relative humidity less than 100% forming large
  droplets
• When the droplets move through clouds they collide with
  smaller droplets.



http://www.capespirit.com/capewestco
astwallpapers.html
Cold Cloud Precipitation
• Bergeron process relies on
  super cooling and super
  saturated
• Super saturation is air that is
  saturated with the respect to
  water
• Super cooled is when water
  will not freeze at o degrees
  Celsius but at 40 degrees
  Celsius, but it will freeze
                                    http://www.liveweatherblogs.co
  when it hits a solid              m/weatherblog/5568/Clouds-
                                    Precipitation-as-earth-s-
                                    thermostat
Rain and Snow
• Rain-drops of water that the
  diameter is at least 0.5 MM
• If the temp. is higher than 4
  degrees Celsius, then snow
  flake will melt and become
  rain before it hits the ground.
                                    http://kohd.com/page/21358
• Low temperature snow makes        7
  up six side ice crystal while
  temp. warmer than -5
  degrees Celsius will become
  large heavy lumps.
Sleet, Glaze, and Hail
• Sleet forms when a layer of air
  with temperature of freezing, lay
  over a subfreezing layer near the
  ground.
• Glaze forms when rain drops are
  super cooled and fall through
  subfreezing air near the ground
  (turn to ice when collides with an
  object).
• Hail starts out as small ice that
  gets bigger by super cooled water    http://weblogs.wgntv.com/chic
                                       ago-weather/tom-skilling-
  droplets as they fall through        blog/2005/03/
  clouds
Adiabatic cooling
• When air is allowed to
  expand it cools and if it is
  compressed it cools.
• Unsaturated air cools at a
  constant rate.
• As you travel higher , the
  atmospheric pressure
  decrease because there         http://www.bio.georgiasouthern.edu
                                 /bio-
  are fewer gas molecules.       home/harvey/lect/lectures.html?cco
                                 de=el&mda=scrn&flnm=abel&ttl=Po
                                 pulations%20and%20their%20enviro
                                 nment
The End!!!!!!!!

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4rsaugling

  • 2. https://earthscience-in- the- nationalparks.wikispace Orographic Lifting s.com/Death+Valley • As elevated terrain act like barrier to air, orographic lifting occurs. • Clouds and precipitation are created when air goes up a terrain, then adiabatic cooling occurs. • when air gets to the leeward side, most of the moisture is gone, if air descend it make condensation and precipitation unlikely.
  • 3. Frontal wedging • Frontal wedging is when cool air and warm collide • Weather producing fronts have to do with specific storm system such as middle latitude cyclones http://www.ldeo.columbia.edu/BRG/ODP/ODP/LE G_SUMM/171A/leg171A.html
  • 4. Convergence • Convergence is when different air masses collide and forces air to be lifted upward. • Takes place in lower atmosphere. • Convergence leads to adiabatic cooling and clouds forming. http://ww2010.atmos.uiuc.edu/(Gh)/gui des/mtr/cld/dvlp/cnvrg.rxml
  • 5. Localized Convective Lifting • When unequal heating of Earth’s surface causes pockets of air to be warmed more than surrounding air. • Thermal are warmer parcels of air that will rise because they are less dense. • When warm parcels of air rise above condensation clouds form and clouds create mid-day rain . http://santasusana.org/pakelly/ES9CP/ES9%2 0clouds.htm
  • 6. Stability • Stable air stays in the same position while unstable air will rise until it reaches an altitude were the surrounding clouds are the same temperature. • Most stable position is temp. inversion • Air temp. increase with height because of radiation cooling off of earths surface http://ocw.usu.edu/Forest__Rang e__and_Wildlife_Sciences/Wildlan d_Fire_Management_and_Plannin g/Unit_7__Atmospheric_Stability_ and_Instability_1.html- skinless_view.html
  • 7. Condensation • Takes place when water vapor changes to a liquid in the air. • Air must be saturated for condensation to happen. • In forms of dew, fog, or clouds. http://www.weatherquestions.com/What_is_conde nsation.htm
  • 8. Types of clouds • Classified by form and height. • Cirrus clouds-thin, white, seen in patches • Stratus- clouds that appear to look like sheets that cover the sky • Cumulus- look like dooms, consist of round independent masses http://www.enchantedlearning.com/subjects/as tronomy/planets/earth/clouds/
  • 9. High clouds • 6000 meters and higher • Cirrus, cirrostratus, and cirrocumulus • Thin and white and often made up of ice crystals http://10.85.0.4:8080/ibreports/ibp/bp.html ?fn=Students&fp=1&ip=10.182.1.107&ibip=1 0.85.0.4&ldu=0&re=0&bu=commons.wikime dia.org/wiki/File:High_Clouds_seen_from_M aui.JPG&bc=Website%20contains%20prohibit ed%20Adult%20Oriented%20content.
  • 10. Middle Clouds • Forms from 2000 to 6000 meters • Types alto cirrus, altostratus, and altocumulus • Altocumulus is larger and denser while altostratus clouds create a uniform of grayish sheets that cover the sky with sunlight seen through. http://www.allstar.fiu.edu/aero/flte nv3.htm
  • 11. Low Clouds • Forms 2000 meters and below • Types Stratus, Stratocumulus, and Nimbostratus • Cloud are fog like and cover most of the sky, and sometime produce light precipitation http://www.capetownskies.com/clouds-low.htm
  • 12. Clouds of Vertical Development • Clouds that do not fit into any height range, base is in low height range while everything else is extended upwards. • Clouds are associated with unstable air. • Cumulus clouds may grow upwards and form clouds with great vertical range. http://www.pilotfriend.com/a • End result cumulonimbus v_weather/meteo/clouds.htm clouds with thunderstorms .
  • 13. Fog http://www.photoshopstar.c om/photo-effects/how- create-fog-effect- • Clouds and fog have similar photoshop/ appearance and structure. • Fog is a cloud that has its base really close to the ground. • Fog forms from the result of radiation cooling, movement of air over a cold surface, and when water vapor is added to bring saturation.
  • 14. Warm Cloud • Collision-coalescence process form rain droplets in warm clouds • It is when water absorbing particles remove water vapor from the air at relative humidity less than 100% forming large droplets • When the droplets move through clouds they collide with smaller droplets. http://www.capespirit.com/capewestco astwallpapers.html
  • 15. Cold Cloud Precipitation • Bergeron process relies on super cooling and super saturated • Super saturation is air that is saturated with the respect to water • Super cooled is when water will not freeze at o degrees Celsius but at 40 degrees Celsius, but it will freeze http://www.liveweatherblogs.co when it hits a solid m/weatherblog/5568/Clouds- Precipitation-as-earth-s- thermostat
  • 16. Rain and Snow • Rain-drops of water that the diameter is at least 0.5 MM • If the temp. is higher than 4 degrees Celsius, then snow flake will melt and become rain before it hits the ground. http://kohd.com/page/21358 • Low temperature snow makes 7 up six side ice crystal while temp. warmer than -5 degrees Celsius will become large heavy lumps.
  • 17. Sleet, Glaze, and Hail • Sleet forms when a layer of air with temperature of freezing, lay over a subfreezing layer near the ground. • Glaze forms when rain drops are super cooled and fall through subfreezing air near the ground (turn to ice when collides with an object). • Hail starts out as small ice that gets bigger by super cooled water http://weblogs.wgntv.com/chic ago-weather/tom-skilling- droplets as they fall through blog/2005/03/ clouds
  • 18. Adiabatic cooling • When air is allowed to expand it cools and if it is compressed it cools. • Unsaturated air cools at a constant rate. • As you travel higher , the atmospheric pressure decrease because there http://www.bio.georgiasouthern.edu /bio- are fewer gas molecules. home/harvey/lect/lectures.html?cco de=el&mda=scrn&flnm=abel&ttl=Po pulations%20and%20their%20enviro nment