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CONTENTS

Tables and Figures

1 Introduction
The Significance and Scope of Climatology 1
Subfields of Climatology 1
The Scope and Organization of This Book 2

PART I ATMOSPHERIC PROCESSES


2 Chemical and Physical Structure of the Atmosphere
Atmospheric Composition 5
Vertical Structure of the Atmosphere 6
Density and Pressure / Vertical Temperature Distribution / Other
Layers / Latitudinal and Seasonal Variations

3 Global Heat Exchange


Heat and Temperature 13
Insolation and Terrestrial Radiation 15
Disposition of lnsolatlon Within the Earth-Atmosphere System

4 Spatial and Temporal Heat Budget Variation


Sun-Earth Relations 24
Angle of Incidence / Daylight Period / Latitudinal Effects on
Insolation Receipts
Atmospheric Effects 30
Heat Exchange at the Earth's Surface 30
Radiation Balance / Latent Heat Exchange / Sensible Heat
Exchange
Heat Balance of the Earth-Atmosphere System 37
Horizontal Transfers of Heat
I
I 5 Atmospheric Pressure and Motion
Air Pressure 39
Measurement and Expression / Variation
Atmospheric Circulation 41
Wind-Force Relations / Coriolis Force / Friction / Hadley Cell /
Momentum / Resonance / Cellular Flow
viii Contents

6 Observed Atmospheric and Oceanic Circulation Patterns


Surface Atmospheric Flow 50
Schematic / Mean Observed Patterns / Causes of the
Observed Pattern
Ocean Currents 58
Upper Atmospheric Flow 65
Jet Streams / Standing Waves / Vorticity
Divergence and Convergence 80

7 Atmospheric Moisture 84 I
Latent Heat 84
Water Vapor 84
Geographical Distribution of Evaporation and Atmospheric
Humid~ty 87

8 Adiabatic Processes and Atmospheric Stability


Atmospheric Stability 96

9 Air Masses and Fronts


Air Masses 102
Source Regions / Weather Associations
Fronts 109
Distribution / Characteristics

i 10 Flow Perturbations i n the Middle Latitudes

Waves 115
Cyclones 117
Thunderstorms and Tornadoes 122
Squall Lines / Tornadoes

11 Flow Perturbations in Lower Latitudes


The Trade Wind Inversion 130
Easterly Waves 132
Hurricanes 132
Equatorial Westerlies 136
The Southeast Asian Monsoon 137

PART I1 CLIMATIC ELEMENTS


-L

12 Wind 139
Climatic Representation of Winds 139
Prevailing Wind / Resultant Wind / Characteristic Wind
Local Winds 140
Sea-Land Breezes / Monsoons / Mountain-Valley Breezes /
Foehns and Boras / Katabatic Winds
Extreme Wind Speeds 143
$1
Contents ix
,! ,
1/
;,1
1
,I i 13 Forms and Distributions of Condensation and Precipitation
Condensation 144
Dew and Frost / Fog / Clouds
Precipitation 152
Forms of Precipitation / Amount and Distribution of
Precipitation / Intensity

14 Temperature
%

Summary of Temperature Controls 164


Heat Exchange / Atmospheric Motion / Change of State of
Water
Temperature Perception 167
Expressions and Distribution of Temperature 167
Expressions / Spatial Distributions / Temporal Variations /
Distribution of Certain Threshold Values

PART Ill CLIMATIC DISTRIBUTION


15 Climatic Classification and Distribution
Empirical Versus Genetic / Criteria / Boundary Conditions
The Classification Used in This Book 187
Climatic Types 193
B: Dry Climates / A: Tropical Humid Climates / C: Subtropical
Climates / D: Temperate Climates / E: Boreal Climate / F: Polar
Climates / Highland Climate
Notes 201

I 16 Climate of North America


General Controls 202
Primary Surface Air Flows and Action Centers / Upper Air
Flows / Cyclogenesis and Cyclone Paths
Regional Characteristics 213
Western Cordillera / The Rocky Mountain System / North
America East of the Rockies / Lake Effects
Climatic Distribution 242

I 17 Climate of Eurasia
Primary Controls 248
Peninsular Europe 250
Precipitation Regimes / Cyclogenesis and Cyclone Routes /
Blocking / Local Winds/ Climatic Types
Continental Eurasia 263
Definition of Area / Primary Controls / Climatic Distribution
Southwest Asia 279
Climatic Types
Monsoon Asia 282
Primary Air Flows / Atmospheric Disturbances / Precipitation
Distribution / Climatic Types
X Contents

18 Climate of Africa 297


11
Continental Shape and Form 297
Primary Atmospheric Circulations 298
July Circulation and Associated Weather / January Circulation
and Associated Weather / Ocean Currents
Climatic D~stribution 307

19 South and Central America 313


Form and Position 313
Topography 313
Atmospheric and Oceanic Circulations and Associated Weather 314
West Coast / East of the Andes
Climatic Distribution 327
West Coast / Andes
Central America and the Caribbean 338 I

20 Australia-New Zealand 342


IS'
j /
Australia 342
The Physical Setting / Primary Air Flows and Precipitation /
Temperature / Special Weather Phenomena / Climate Types
New Zealand 351

21 The Polar Regions 355 41


Antarctica 357
Area and Topography / Heat Exchanges and Temperature /
Atmospheric Circulation / Condensation, Precipitation, and
Deposition
The Arctic 364
Greenland / The North Polar .Basin

Further Readings
Index
TABLES AND FIGURES

Tables
2.1 Average Composition of the Lower Atmosphere, 5
4.1 Atmospheric Thickness and Radiation Intensity on a Horizontal Surface for Varying
Sun Altitude above the Horizon, 25
!
Length of Daylight Period by Latitude on the 15th of Each Month, 28
Climatic Classifications, 190
Temperature and Precipitation Data for North America, 246
Temperature and Precipitation Data for Eurasia, 294
Temperature and Precipitation Data for Africa, 312 I
Temperature and Precipitation Data for South and Central America, 341
Temperature and Precipitation Data for Australia and New Zealand, 354
I
Temperature and Precipitation Data for the Polar Regions, 372
Equivalent Units and Conversions, 373

Figures
2.1 U.S. Standard Atmosphere and mean vertical temperature distributions, 7
2.2 Median tropopause heights, 9
2.3 Mean temperature at the 200 mb. level in July, 1.1
3.1 Fahrenheit, Celsius, and Kelvin temperature scales, 74
3.2 Heat radiation from the sun, 75
3.3 Solar and terrestrial radiation, 16
3.4 Absorption of solar radiation, 17
3.5 Instantaneous heat exchanges among space, the atmosphere, and the earth's
surface, 79
3.6 Albedos of various kinds of surfaces, 22
4.1 Changes in earth's position relative to the sun during a year, 26
4.2 The circle of illumination during the solstices and equinoxes, 27
4.3 Angle of sun's rays, day length, and insolation receipt at the top of the atmosphere
during the solstices and equinoxes, 29
4.4 lnsolation receipt at the top of the atmosphere, 31
4.5 lnsolation receipt at sea level, 31
4.6 Distribution of annual insolation at the surface of the earth, 32
4.7 Annual radiation balance at the surface of the earth, 33
4.8 Annual amount of heat used to evaporate water, 35
4.9 Annual sensible heat exchange between the earth's surface and the
atmosphere, 36
4.10 Incoming and outgoing radiation for the earth-atmosphere system, 37
4.11 Annual horizontal heat transfers, 38
xii Tables and Figures

Single-cell hemispheric circulations, 41


The Coriolis Force, 42
Frictionless airflow at 3100-3300 meters, 44
Wind-force diagrams of surface air flow involving friction, 45
Gradient wind flows around high and low pressure cells in the Northern
Hemisphere, 47
Horizontal and vertical air flows in high and low pressure cells in the Northern and
Southern Hemispheres, 48
Major pressure and wind patterns on the surface of the earth, 51
January sea-level pressures and prevailing surface winds, 52
July sea-level pressures and prevailing surface winds, 53
January sea-level pressure, Northern Hemisphere, 55
July sea-level pressure, Northern Hemisphere, 56
January sea-level pressure, Southern Hemisphere, 57
July sea-level pressure, Southern Hemisphere, 58
Streamlines and speeds of surface resultant winds, January, 60
Streamlines and speeds of surface resultant winds, July, 61
Surface ocean currents, January, 62
Surface ocean currents, July, 63
The thermal wind, 66
January 500 mb. chart, Northern Hemisphere, 67
Juiy 500 mb. chart, Northern Hemisphere, 68
January 500 mb. chart, Southern Hemisphere. 69
July 500 mb. chart, Southern Hemisphere, 70
January 850 mb. chart, Northern Hemisphere, 71
Zonal winds around the earth, 72
Meridionic circulation and associated jet cores, 73
Positions and strengths of jet streams in the Northern Hemisphere, January, 74
300 mb. chart, 6 February 1981, 75
Positions and strengths of jet streams in the Northern Hemisphere, July, 76
A wave sequence in the upper troposphere, 77
500 mb. chart, 12 April 1983, 78
Path of a constant-level balloon drifting at 12 kilometers, 79
Changing Coriolis Force and relative vorticity in flow along a standing wave, 80
Speed divergence and convergence induced by Coriolis Force with north-south
flow, Northern Hemisphere, 81
Heat requirements to change the state of water, 85
Saturation mixing ratio of moisture, 87
Evaporation in mm., January, 88
Evaporation in mm., Juiy, 89
Latitudinal distributions of atmospheric vapor pressure and relative humidity, 90
Relative humidity, July, 91
Precipitable water in mm., February, 92
Prl?cipitable water in mm., August, 93
Stability considerations on a pseudo-adiabatic diagram, 98
Vertical structure of a cPks air mass, 706
Vertical structure of an mT air mass, 108
Positions of surface air masses and fronts, January, 111
Positions of surface air masses and fronts, July, 112
Life cycle of a wave formation in the Northern Hemisphere, 116
Vertical cross-sections of warm-front-type'and cold-front-type occiusions, 118
Partially occluded middle-latitude cyclone, 119
Tables and Figures xiii

Cross-section of fronts and weather, 120


Cross-section of fronts and weather, 121
Surface low follows wave pattern of upper tropospheric flow, 122
Cyclone paths in the Northern Hemisphere, January, 123
Cyclone paths in the Northern Hemisphere, July, 124'
Anticyclone paths in the Northern Hemisphere, January, 125
Anticyclone paths in the Northern Hemisphere, July, 126
Stages in the development of a thunderstorm cell, 127
Annual number of days with thunderstorms, worldwide, 128
Squall line ahead of a cold front of cyclone, 129
Trade wind cumulus on Big Island of Hawaii, 131
An easterly wave in the Caribbean, 133
Characteristic tracks of tropical storms, 134
Satellite photo of Hurricane Allen, 8 August 1980, 137
Relative cloud cover, Northern Hemisphere, December-February, 148
Relative cloud cover, Southern Hemisphere, December-February, 149
Relative cloud cover, Northern Hemisphere, June-August, 150
Relative cloud cover, Southern Hemisphere, June-August, 151
Relative cloud cover, December-February, 152
Relative cloud cover, June-August, 153
Snow cover, worldwide, 155
Number of days with hail, worldwide, 157
Annual precipitation, worldwide, 158
Shifts of pressure and wind belts and resultant precipitation during a year, 160
Annual precipitation variability, worldwide, 162
Worldwide surface air temperature, January, 169
Worldwide surface air temperature, July, 170
Isanomalies of sea-level air temperatures, January, 772
Isanomalies of sea-level air temperatures, July, 173
Worldwide annual surface air temperature range, 774
Probable minimum surface air temperature once every ten years, 175
Days per year with maximum surface air temperatures greater than 40% 176
Relationship between insolation, terrestrial radiation, and surface air
temperature, 177
Seasonal temperature regimes and relative magnitudes at various latitudes, 178
Frost-free period, worldwide, 179
Annual sums of temperatures when mean daily temperatures remain above
10°C., 180
Annual difference between precipitation and potential evapotranspiration, 188
Monthly moisture conditions at Raleigh, North Carolina, 189
Worldwide climatic distribution, 192
Major relief features of North America, 203
Resultant surface streamlines, January, 204
Resultant surface streamlines, April, 205
Resultant surface streamlines, July, 206
Resultant surface streamlines, October, 207
Mean 300 mb. winds, January, 270
Mean 300 mb. winds, July, 211
North America: Yearly regimes of heat and moisture resources for vegetative
growth, 214
Redwoods north of San Francisco, 215
Dry grass and live oak trees, California Coast Range, 216
Tables and Figures

Snow on the Cascade Mountains during April, 217


Dust clouds caused by foehn winds near Cajon Pass, 220
Dust over the central valley of California in summer, 222
Moisture content of the atmosphere, 223
The Owens Valley of eastern California, 224
The Colorado Plateau in northeastern Arizona, 225
Bad Water, the lowest spot in Death Valley, 226
Dust devil on a hot afternoon in Nevada, 227
Playa lake bed in Nevada, 228
Great Salt Lake Desert, western Utah, 229
A thunderstorm over the Colorado Plateau, northeastern Arizona, 230
Pinon trees south of the Grand Canyon, northern Arizona, 231
Rocky Mountain National Park, Colorado, in June, 232
The Continental Divide, Rocky Mountain National Park, 233
Monthly position of upper air wind speeds in excess of 35 m/s., 238
Annual incidence of tornadoes, 240
Above lower Michigan and Lake Michigan in summer, 242
Bunch grass steppe of western South Dakota, 243
A wind break west of Mitchell, South Dakota, 244
Major relief features. of Eurasia and boundaries of subregions, 251
Major relief features of Europe, 253
Seasons of maximum and minimum precipitation, 255
Yearly regimes of heat and moisture resources for vegetative
growth, 256, 258, 260
A lush British garden under stratocumulus overcast, 263
Deciduous forest of the Odenwald, southern Germany, 264
Thaw lake and hummocks over permafrost near Yakutsk, northeastern USSR, 269
Tundra landscape in northeast European Russia, 272
Forest-tundra in north-central Siberia, 273
Deciduous broadleaf forest in eastern Belorussia, 274
Mixed coniferous and broadleaf forest, central Ural Mountains, 275
Wooded steppe in subhumid central Ukraine, 276
Wheat field in the steppe region of southwestern Siberia, 276
Along the Zeravshan River, Soviet Central Asia, 277
Young saxaul trees near Bukhara, Soviet Central Asia, 277
Yurt camp in the Gobi Desert, southern ~ d n g o l i a , 278
The Khyber Pass between Peshawar and Kabul,, 279
Air flows over southeastern Asia, 284
100 mb. chart, July, 286
Major relief features of Africa, 299
Sea-level pressure and surface air flow patterns across Africa, 301
The escarpment inland from the Namib Coast of southeastern Africa, 305
Yearly regimes of heat and moisture resources for vegetative growth, 308
Upland savanna in east Africa, 309 x

The Nile Valley near Al Uqsur (Luxor), 310


The coastal plain south of the escarpment near Cape Town, 310
Major relief features of South America, 315
Upwelling water south of Lima, Peru, 317
Beach sand engulfing the village of Sechura, northern Peru, 318
The hills inland from Tumbes, northern Peru, 319
The hills farther inland from Tumbes and at higher elevation, 320
A fog bank over downtown Lima, 321
Tables and Figures xv

Laguna de Vochuguen, Chile, 323


Along the Strait of Magellan, 324
Progression of the northwesterlies into South America during the Southern
Hemisphere summer, 326
Yearly regimes of heat and moisture resources for vegetative growth, 329
Sabana de Bogota, fields on the surface of an old lake bed, 331
Fields on the Altiplano south of Quito, Ecuador, 331
Alpine pastures on the Altiplano near La Raya, Peru, 332
The Bolivian Altiplano near La Paz, 332
Tropical Atlantic forest, southern Brazil near Florianopolis, 335
Rainforest in the interior Amazon Basin, 336
Clearing the rainforest in eastern Peru, 337
Surface air flows over the Caribbean Sea and Central America, 339
Major relief features of Australia-New Zealand, 343
Yearly regimes of heat and moisture sources for vegetative growth, 344
Near-surface wind flow pattern in January, 346
The wet coastal area of Queensland, 347
The coastal escarpment south of Sydney, 348
Fields and eucalyptus trees near Perth, southwestern Australia, 352
Governor's Bay near Christchurch, South Island, New Zealand, 353
The annual regime of sunlight poleward of 50' latitude, 356
Extent of sea ice in Antarctica, 359
Surface air flow over Antarctica, 362
Major features of the Arctic region, 365
Arctic surface air temperature, February, 368
Surface air temperature, July, 369
I 1 INTRODUCTION

The Significance and Scope Subfields of Climatology


of Climatology Curiosity about and dependence on the
Climatology is the study of the exchanges state of the atmosphere have prompted the
of energy and mass at the interface between development of a broad field of climatology
the atmosphere and the surface of the earth. that contains within it subfields specifically
The temperature, moisture, and motion conceived to serve the needs of certain
characteristics of the atmosphere are gen- facets of life and economic activity. Within
erally the initiating factors at this interface the general scope of climatology, the sub-
for much of the activity in other natural fields of physical and synoptic climatology
phenomena, such as plant and animal seek primarily to understand the distri-
growth, soil development, weathering and bution of climate over the earth by de-
erosion processes, and the evolution of the veloping physical laws that relate such things
landscape. These atmospheric characteris- as radiation and other forms of heat trans-
tics are all-pervading in human affairs, so fer, temperature, moisture, and atmospheric
much so that they become taken for granted pressure and motion. Set in instantaneous
and one is apt to forget that the climate time frames, these relations reveal synoptic
of a place and the weather events com- patterns of areal distributions across the
prising that climate overwhelmingly deter- face ofthe earth. Such studies are invaluable
mine the rhythm of life. The alternation to weather forecasters, who must know the
of day and night-the receipt or not of causes behind weather events and the areal
sunlight-sets the basic cycle of life. relationships among them. The subfield of
At breakfast each morning, one turns to regional climatology develops naturally from
the radio, television, or newspaper for the an understanding of the physical and syn-
weather report to help plan what to wear, optic aspects of climate. It serves to un-
what precautions to take in traveling to derstand the climate of the earth more
work, and so forth. The economic fortunes precisely by sectioning the earth's surface
of farmers completely depend upon heat into regions that are small enough and
and moisture conditions during the growing homogeneous enough to be comprehended
season. The well-being of humans around as areal units that can be compared with
the globe to a great extent depends upon other areal units around the world.
the availability of food and fiber and the A subfield of paleoclimatology has
avoidance of natural hazards such as dam- evolved that deals with past climate and
aging winds and floods, which are caused attempts to ascertain causes and effects of
by the vagaries of weather and time vari- long-term climatic changes outside the
ations of climate. timespan of normal climatic variation. This
2 Introduction

subfield draws upon evidence compiled by Agroclimatology has continued to de-


such specialists as geologists, biologists, velop primarily as a subfield of microcli-
archeologists, and historians to piece to- matology, but it has developed indices of
gether long-term climatic changes that have its own that identify those elements of
affected the earth through its long history climate that are solely or primarily in con-
of at least 4.5 billion years. The study of trol of specific phases of plant growth. More
drastic climatic change in the past stems recently, as the world's population has be-
primarily from intellectual curiosity. But come increasingly urbanized, the field of
there are some pragmatic motives, for an urban climatology has developed as a sub-
identification of the causes of natural field of applied climatology. This again has
changes in the past may illuminate ways resulted in the evolution of distinct sets of
that man might induce changes in the future observations and climatic indices specifi-
for his own benefit. It may also shed ad- cally designed to suit urban planning and
ditional light on the course of human his- construction considerations.
tory. Closely related to climatic change are
purposeful and inadvertent modifications The Scope and Organization
of climate as a result of human activities.
of This Book
A study ofpast climatic change may identify
key processes that, taken to some critical Obviously, one book of reasonable length
point, could set off series of chain reactions cannot fully cover all these diverse subfields
that could culminate in such dramatic events of climatology. In a single semester's time,
as the ice ages. one can only establish a solid basis for
Pragmatic motives have stimulated the comprehending the contemporary distri-
development of the broad field of applied bution of climate over the earth and un-
climatology, which approaches climatology derstanding the reasons for it. Such knowl-
primarily from its effects on other phe- edge will lay the groundwork for further
nomena, generally those that profoundly studies on topics such as climatic change
influence human lives and their economic and the various applications of climatology
well-being. Originally, most investigations to other phenomena. Therefore, this book
of an applied nature related to agriculture, will be limited primarily to such subfields
since intimate linkages exist between cli- as physical, synoptic, and regional clima-
mate and the agricultural part of economic tology. Its two objectives are: (a) to describe
activity. In a broader scope it related to the climate of the earth and (b) to develop
the entire field of biology, which became principles that will make the distribution
known as bioclimatology. Such studies of climate meaningful. In practice, the sec-
quickly revealed the inadequacy of climatic ond objective must be accomplished firsi.
data that had been gathered primarily in To attach significance to regional descrip-
weather shelters about 1.5 meters above tion, one must master the atmospheric pro-
ground level. It soon became apparent that cesses relating heat, moisture, and motion.
most crops are affected primarily by the Although the focus is on properties and
air next to the ground surface or even within processes at the bottom of the atmosphere
the soil itself, and this led to the (rapidly at the interface between the atmosphere
developing) field of microclimatology, the and the earth's surface, linkages exist that
study of the air next to the earth's surface. cause upper portions of the atmosphere to
As a result, new measuring instruments affect what is going on below. Therefore,
have been invented to collect data on tem- to understand actions at the surface one
perature, humidity, and air motion within must know something about the entire at-
the first two meters of air. mosphere.
. . Introduction 3

To grasp the complete makeup of the series of reactions. Thus, a complete con-
climate of a place, one must know both sideration of temperature, probably the most
the statistical indices of individual climatic commonly observed and all-pervading ele-
elements and the day-to-day weather events ment of climate, is delayed until Chapter
that create these statistics. In other words, 14, after everything that affects it has been
one must have a compendium of statistical discussed.
means and deviations in one hand and a The description of the climate of the
set of daily weather maps in the other. As earth in Chapters 16-21 will proceed on
will be elaborated in Chapter 15, places in a continent-to-contieent basis rather than
different parts of the earth having essen- on a climatic-type basis. The author believes
tially the same statistical means of, for it is better to describe climate and its causes
example, temperature and precipitation may and influences in terms of weather events,
experience entirely different types of which are real happenings in real areas,
weather. Thus, it is not enough to deal only rather than in terms of somewhat arbitrary
in statistical averages and variations. climatic categories. A climatic type is an
This book will consist of essentially three abstraction, but weather events actually
interwoven parts: (a) presentation of the happen. A consideration of them will not
basic principles governing atmospheric pro- only impart a better understanding of the
cesses. (b) world distributions of statistical weather makeup of the climate of an area,
means and variations of individual ele- but will also give the student some knowl-
ments and climatic types, and (c) analyses edge of world geography, real locations, and
of weather complexes from which these earth features.
statistics have been derived. To accomplish To provide a worldwide framework,
this the book will be organized into three within which to fit the climate of each part
parts. Chapters 2 through 11 will deal with of the earth and allow comparisons with
the processes taking place in the atmosphere other parts, Chapter 15 will briefly present
and between the atmosphere and the earth's a classification scheme and a distribution
surface. Chapters 12 through 14 will de- map of climatic types based on temperature
scribe the resultant spatial and temporal and precipitation data. It must be realized,
distributions of the three primary resultant however, that the categories utilized in such
climatic'elements: condensation forms and classifications are very broad, with much
precipitation, temperature, and wind. variation within any given type from one
Chapters 15 through 21 will describe and continent to another. Students should re-
explain the climate of the earth on a regional member that the types are not immutable
basis. nor identical from region to region and
Although it is impossible to talk about that their boundaries are not real. They are
heat and moisture without mentioning tem- only transition zones across which sweep
perature and precipitation, the complete synoptic situations that transgress climatic-
discussions of elements per se have been type boundaries.
delayed until all the atmospheric processes Finally, this book is written for students.
have been presented, since all the processes Generalizations have been presented with-
have bearings on the final, measured, cli- out the clutter of finer qualifications that
matic elements. More than heat affects tem- would satisfy more seasoned specialists.
perature, and more than moisture affects Since undoubtedly the largest group of users
precipitation. In fact, it is difficult to con- will come from North America, the regional
sider even one process at a time; so many discussion in Chapters 16-21 will start with
feedback mechanisms exist in the atmo- that continent. Within this chapter certain
sphere that almost every action causes a principles of regional discussion can be
4 Introduction

established which can then be used in rica because of its proximity to Eurasia,
discussion of the other continents: first and finally South America, Australia-New
Eurasia, another primarily middle-latitude Zealand, and the Polar areas.
Northern Hemisphere landmass, then Af-
2 CHEMICAL AND PHYSICAL
STRUCTURE OF THE ATMOSPHERE

posure to direct bombardment of high-


Atmospheric Composition
energy particles from the sun splits many
The earth's atmosphere is a mixture of molecules into their component atoms, often
gases in portions essentially as are shown ionizing the air. For instance, O2 typically
in Table 2.1. Nitrogen makes up almost splits into 0 , ,some of which may recom-
four-fifths the volume of the entire atmo- bine with O2 to form 03,ozone. Thus,
sphere, and oxygen more than one-fifth. All although oxygen is found at all levels, the
the other gases combined make up less than molecule O2 that is breathed by humans
the remaining 1 percent. These ratios re- at the earth's surface is not necessarily
main essentially the same to the height of present higher in the atmosphere.
more than 100 kilometers (more than 60 Although nitrogen and oxygen are by far
miles). Even so, molecular structures tend the most abundant gases, and oxygen is
to change above 50 kilometers since ex- necessary to a11 life on earth, neither gas

Table 2.1 Average Composition of the Lower Atmosphere

Approximate
Molecular Percent by molecular
Gas composition volume mass

Nitrogen 78.08
Oxygen 20.94
Argon 0.93
Carbon dioxide 0.03(variable)
Neon 0.0018
Helium 0.0005
Ozone 0.00006
Hydrogen 0.00005
Krypton Trace
Xenon Trace
Methane Trace
Water vapor Variable
Average
6 Chemical and Physical Structure of the Atmosphere

figures prominently in the study of climate. more dense. Therefore, most of the mass
More important to weather processes are of the atmosphere is in the bottom few
the heat absorption and radiation prop- kilometers. Upward from the earth's sur-
erties of gases, such as carbon dioxide and face, the air thins very rapidly at first and
I
water vapor, and the consequent hydrologic then at slower and slower rates. So even
cycles. though most of the atmosphere is near the
!
The amount of water vapor varies greatly earth's surface, it cannot be defined as
from one place to another, according to its having an outer edge. Gas molecules as
availability for evaporation at the surface
and the holding, capacity of the air above.
high as 60,000 kilometers (37,000 miles)
above the earth's surface move with the '
I

Since all water vapor is derived from the earth, attracted to it by magnetic and grav-
earth's surface, it decreases rapidly with itational fields, and therefore can be con- 1
height. Unlike the other gases, water changes
state within the range of temperatures com-
sidered as part of the earth's atmosphere.
Of course, the air is very rare at this altitude.
i
monly observed within the atmosphere; Half the mass of the atmosphere lies below
1
therefore, water vapor derived from the approximately 5-6 kilometers (17,000-
earth's surface does not accumulate in the 19,500 feet), depending on the temperature.
air and mix upward thoroughly. but re- Practically all weather phenomena with
condenses into liquid water and precipitates which this book will be dealing occur within
back to earth before it can rise more than the bottom 8-16 kilometers, which contain ..
a few kilometers into the atmosphere. about 80 percent of the atmosphere by
For these reasons, throughout much of weight, and most of the considerations in
the atmosphere there is practically no water this book will be limited to only the lower i

i
vapor, and the average for the entire at- portion of that. i
,, 'I
) mosphere is a small fraction of 1 percent. Since the thickness of the entire atmo- j
i
But near the earth's surface water vapor sphere, for practical purposes, is 100-200 , .
may account for as much as 4 percent of kilometers, the atmosphere is only a thin
the atmosphere by volume in very warm, shell compared to the earth, whose radius
humid air. Since the water molecule is made averages about 6360 kilometers. It can be
up of two atoms of hydrogen and one atom seen that we are living at the bottom of a
of oxygen, its molecular mass is 18, which
is considerably lighter than the molecular
relatively shallow ocean of air, which we
will consider briefly in its entirety before I
mass for most of the gases listed in Table descending into its bottom layer, where we i
2.1. Thus, it makes up less of the a~mosphere will be spending the rest of our time.
by mass than by volume, and humid air Processes in the upper atmosphere may
!
masses will be lighter than dry air masses influence those in the lower atmosphere,
with identical temperatures. The signifi- although linkages are not clearly known at
I
cance of this fact will become evident later. present.
!
Vertical Structure of the Vertical Temperature Distribution
Atmosphere Evidence gathered from natural phenom- q.

ena, such as the transmission of sound


Density and Pressure
waves, and from direct observations by
Since air is a compressible mixture of gases, radiosondes, balloons, rockets, and satel-
it is not the same density throughout. The lites, have been patched together to con-
upper air, pulled by the force of gravity struct a composite model of the vertical
toward the earth's surface, weighs down on structure of the atmosphere (see Figure 2.1,
the lower air, compresses it, and makes it Standard Atmosphere). On the average for
HEIGHT (Krn)

HEIGHT (Miles)

HEIGHT (Km)

HEIGHT (Miles)
ROBINSON PROJECTION -
0 1500 3000 K M S

Figure 2.2B. Median tropopause heights (km.) during June-August. From D.E Rex, ed., Climate
of the Free Atmosphere, Vol. 4 of World Survey of Climatology (Amsterdam: Elsevier, 1969).
10 Chemical and Physical Structure of the? Atmosphere

the entire earth, temperature at the earth's ture of the atmosphere can be explained
surface is around 15°C (59"F), and it de- by considerations of absorption and trans-
creases upward through the atmosphere at mission of heat energy originating from the
an average rate of about 6.5"C per kilometer sun and by temperature changes resulting
(3.5"F per thousand feet) to a n altitude of from expansion and contraction of verti-
about 11 kilometers (6.8 miles), at which cally moving air. (These relationships will
point the temperature is about -57°C. become clear as the processes controlling
Above 11 kilometers it remains constant them are discussed individually in suc-
(isothermal) to about 20 kilometers and ceeding chapters.) Perhaps the most-out-
then increases. A maximum temperature standing feature of the atmosphere's ver-
of approximately -2°C is reached at around tical temperature structure is the relatively
47 kilometers, and the temperature remains warm layer in the middle, centering on
at approximately -2°C up to about 52 about 50 kilometers height. This appears
kilometers, after which it decreases again to be due to the absorption of much of
to a minimum of about -86°C at around the ultraviolet light from the sun by ozone
86 kilometers. Above that it remains iso- (0,),which is concentrated at and below
thermal for about 5 kilometers and then that level. As explained earlier, ozone is
increases to the outer edge of the atmo- one of the results of the splitting of mol-
sphere where it may reach temperatures of ecules by high-energy particles in the sun-
as much as 725°C or more. At this altitude light, which causes the atmospheric mo-
the air is so rarified that lay concepts of lecular makeup to be somewhat different
temperature break down, as will be ex- in the upper layers than it is in the tropo-
plained later. sphere at the bottom.
Thus, the earth's atmosphere is divided
into rather discrete layers with only min-
imal exchanges of air between them because
Other Layers
of stability conditions, which will be ex- In addition to the layers named according
plained later. The layer next to the earth's to temperature lapse rates, certain other
surface with a lapse (decrease) of temper- layers in the atmosphere are known by
ature with altitude is known as the tropo- names that reflect molecular structures and
sphere. This is the layer in which we live their related phenomena such as ionization.
and where most weather phenomena take The ozonosphere, for instance, extends from
place. It is topped by the tropopalrse at the 15 to 50 kilometers. The ionospl~ere,where
point where the temperature ceases to de- molecules have been split into their con-
crease and becomes isothermal. The nature stituent atoms, with resultant negative and
and height of the tropopause has profound positive electrical charges, exists in several
effects on weather phenomena in the tro- layers extending from about 50 kilometers
posphere below, and therefore a great deal to about 600 kilometers. In the far reaches
will be said about it later. Above the tro- of the rarefied atmosphere, between 6000
popause the temperature increases in a very and 60,000 kilometers above the earth's
stable layer of air known as the stratosphere. surface, charged atmospheric particles,
The top of the stratosphere is the strato- whose movement apparently is largely con-
palne, and above that the temperature de- trolled by the magnetic field of the earth,
creases through the nzesosphere t o a min- form the Van Allen radiation belts in what
imum temperature at the tnesopause, above is known as the inagnetosphere. Although
which the temperature increases again much remains to be learned about the
throughout the thennosphere. connections between these upper layers of
Much of the vertical temperature struc- the atmosphere and the climate at the earth's
(.69,51 '.'a!uslg 'a~aqdsolulvsaid aqi JO aleur!lD ' x a v L U O . ',k[nf
~ ) u!
(]JAJ]VJS JAOqU SJJjJw U U J N 'E'ZJ.'~Z!J
0 0 f z 1 - 0 0 ~ 0 1 )]a"[ 'qLU 00Z JYl 1V '3,U! '~.'nlV.'~dLUal
S W H OOOE OOSL 0
12 Chemical and Physical Structure of the Atmosphere

surface, it is obvious that the ozonosphere Since the troposphere extends to greater
is very important to life at the bottom of heights in the equatorial region than in the
the atmosphere because it filters out much polar areas, the normal decrease of tem-
of the harmful short wave radiation that perature with height continues through a
could destroy living tissue. thicker layer in the equatorial area and
eventually reaches lower temperatures at
the tropopause level than is true above the
Latitudinal and Seasonal Variations poles. The tropopause is typically about
As can be seen in Figure 2.1, the standard 25°C colder above the equator than above
atmosphere varies significantly according the poles. Since the temperature eventually
to latitude and season. In the tropical at- increases above the tropopause in the strato-
mosphere, extending about 25 to 30 degrees sphere, the lower stratosphere becomes as
on either side of the equator, the tropo- much as 30°C warmer over the poles than
sphere is thick, the tropopause is high and over the equator at the same altitude. This
consequently cold, and the temperature brings about a reversal in air flow from
generally increases immediately above the east to west throughout much of the strato-
tropopause rather than remaining isother- sphere, while below, in the upper tropo-
mal for a while as it does at higher latitudes. sphere, the general circulation is from west
The higher the latitude, the lower and to east.
warmer the tropopause and the thicker the During winter the temperature increases
isothermal layer in the lower stratosphere. upward through the stratosphere faster
The height of the tropopause is controlled above the equator than above the poles, so
primarily by the average temperature of that in the middle and upper stratosphere
the troposphere, which expands when it is the temperature once more becomes warmer
warm and contracts when it is cold. Thus, over the equator than over the poles. But
outside the tropics, the tropopause is usu- during summer the equator remains colder
.
ally higher in summer than in winter. than the poles throughout the stratosphere.
Figure 2.2 shows these general zonal and During the solstice periods throughout much
seasonal variations of the tropopause, but of the stratosphere, there is a consistent
it also reveals important deviations from temperature gradient from pole to pole,
simple latitudinal patterns, particularly in warm over the summer pole and cold over
lower latitudes. The most noticeable irreg- the winter pole, with intermediate tem-
ularity is the great height of the tropopause peratures over the equator (Figure 2.3).
during June, July, and August over south- Thus, at these heights the equator ceases
east Asia; this is probably due to the to- to be a climatic divide with symmetrical
pography of the high Tibetan Plateau, which distributions of temperature on either side.
acts as a heat source for the middle trop- Such a temperature distribution results in
osphere during summer. Although temper- easterly winds in the summer hemisphere
atures on the plateau surface are cool be- stratosphere and, simultaneously, westerly
cause of its elevation, they are warmer than winds in the winter hemisphere strato-
they would be at that altitude in the free sphere (see Figure 6.18). (The reason for
atmosphere, were not the plateau-surface this will be explained in Chapters 5 and
present to absorb sunlight. 6.)
3 1 GLOBAL HEAT EXCHANGE

Heat is the energy input that initiates all flects a change in the other. Heat is a form
atmospheric processes. Its unequal distri- of energy that exists in quanta that can be
bution over the earth causes density dif- added or subtracted. Temperature is a mea-
ferences in the atmosphere that bring about sure of energy level, an expression of the
atmospheric motion. Heat is the energy that mean square speed of the molecular motion
evaporates water from the earth's surface of a substance. Although temperature will
and causes it to mix upward into the be dealt with in a later chapter, it is nec-
atmosphere. Heat is intimately exchanged essary to define its units of measure here,
with other forms of energy, such as mo- since the unit of measure for heat is based
lecular motion, kinetic energy of atmo- on the unit of measure for temperature.
spheric flow, the latent energy of the change In 1714 Gabriel Fahrenheit, of Holland,
of state of water, and the potential energy adapted the Fahrenheit temperature scale
of position above the earth's surface. to the mercurial thermometer. He based
For practical purposes all the heat energy his zero point on the lowest temperature
that the earth's atmosphere receives orig- he could obtain by mixing ice and salt. A
inates from the sun. What happens to the second point on his scale was fixed by what
sunlight as it penetrates the earth-atmo- he thought was the human temperature,
sphere system depends on the character- which he called 96". (This subsequently
istics of the atmosphere and the underlying proved to be slightly inaccurate.) At any
surface. For the earth as a whole the entirety rate, on this scale the freezing point of
of climate can be explained by the amount water turned out to be 32" and the boiling
of sunlight received and the character of point at sea level, 212". Much of the English-
the surface receiving it. For any portion speaking world adopted this scale, which
of the earth-atmosphere system, however, has turned out to be a rather awkward one.
the climate is profoundly influenced by Now the United States stands almost alone
atmospheric motion, which itself is a prod- in its use, and there are plans to convert
uct of heat receipt and nature of the earth's to the Celsius scale in the near future.
surface. Since the heat input from the sun In 1742 Anders Celsius, a Swedish as-
is the energy that initiates motion, it is tronomer, introduced the Celsius (centi-
important that it be considered first in grade) scale, which has its zero degree based
considerable detail. Before that can be done, on the freezing point of water, and 100
some definitions are in order. degrees based on the boiling point of water
at normal sea-level pressure. This has proved
to be a more logical scale, particularly since
Heat and Temperature the size of the degree is the same as that
Heat and temperature are not the same of the absolute (Kelvin) scale invented by
thing, although a change in one often re- Lord Kelvin (William Thompson) in 1848.
I : 14 Global Heat Exchange
I
The zero point on this scale is based on
the cessation of molecular motion. Since
temperature is the measure of the amount
I
of molecular motion in a substance, it is
logical that with no molecular motion the
temperature is zero.
Only the absolute scale has a true zero
point on which to base temperature mea-
BOILING
surements that will allow additions, sub-
tractions, multiplications, and divisions of
temperatures as if they were quanta. There-
fore, this scale has to be used in all scientific
formulas. Since weather records around the
world are all recorded in either Celsius or
Fahrenheit degrees, these have to be con-
verted first to absolute or Kelvin degrees
before they can be used in formulas. Lord
Kelvin chose his degree size to equal that
of the Celsius degree, and therefore it is
easy to convert between Celsius and Kelvin FREEZING
temperatures. He found that the absolute
zero point was 273°C below the freezing
point of water. Therefore, O" on the Celsius
scale is equal to 273" on the absolute scale,
and to convert from Celsius to Kelvin all
one need do is add 273 (Figure 3.1).
It is not quite so simple to convert from
Fahrenheit to Celsius, since the two scales
not only have different zero polnts, but
also different degree sizes. Since it is 100°C
between the boiling and freezing polnts of
water and 180°F between the two, the Cel-
sius degree is 1.8 times, or nine-fifths, as
Figure 3.1. Fahrenheit, Celsius, and Kelvin
large as the Fahrenheit degree. To convert temperature scales.
from Celsius to Fahrenheit, one must mul-
tiply the Celsius reading by 915 and then
add 32. To convert from Fahrenheit to Heat energy is expressed in a number
Celsius, one must first subtract 32 and then of ways, but for the purposes of this book
multiply by 519. Thus, it will be expressed in calories.* One calorie
is the amount of heat required to raise the
temperature of 1 gram of water 1°C From
and 14.5"C to 15.5"C). This is not the same
"C = 519 ("F- 32). calorie as the food calorie, which is 1000
g,
s
$
*The international system of units (SI) recently adopted by the World Meteorological Organization (WMO)
specifies the joule (J) as the official unit of energy. One calorie equals 4.186 joules or 4.186 X 107 ergs. The
official unit of power (rate of expenditure of energy) is the watt (W). One watt equals one joule per second. r
8 The rate at which energy passes through or falls on a unit area is called radiant flux density. This is usually $?
expressed in langleys per minute, where one langley equals one calorie per square centimeter (ly = cal/cm2),
or in watts per square meter. One ly/min = 697.5 W/m2. !I.
@
6
&,
Global Heat Exchange 15

times as large. To distinguish between the


two, some books use the term "gram cal-
orie" to indicate the small unit of heat that
raises the temperature of 1 gram of water
1°C. Since this book always alludes to the
heat unit, the simple term "calorie" will
be used.

Insolation and Terrestrial


Radiation
Figure 3.2. The heat radiatedfrorn the sun
The heat received from incoming sunlight spreads over a larger area the farther from
is known as insolation. This has been mea- the sun. Thus the heat j'lux per unit area
sured approximately at many different points decreases with the square of the distancefrom
the sun.
on the earth over a great number of years
and, taking into account various states of this amount of energy were being produced
the atmosphere, it has been estimated that by the combustion of coal, the sun would
at the top of the atmosphere slightly less have burned up in 5000 years, even though
than two calories of heat are received per it is a large body with a volume approx-
minute on a square centimeter of surface imately one million times that of the earth.
oriented perpendicular to the sunlight. The sun's energy is not being produced by
Within the range of error of calculations, the combustion of coal, however, but by
this appears to be a constant, known as the fusion of hydrogen to helium. This
the solar constant.* process will consume the sun's mass in
The sunlight is the result of radiation about 14 X lo1?years, which is about 3000
ofLheat outward from the sun which on times longer than the earth's estimated age
the average is about 150 million kilometers at present.
(93 million miles) away from the earth. By comparison to the sun and the dis-
Since the sun is essentially a sphere, and tance between the sun and the earth, the
heat is radiated perpendicular to its surface earth is a small speck in space that inter-
in all directions, sun rays diverge away cepts only a minute portion of the total
from the sun's surface so that the heat flux heat emission from the sun. The entire
passing through any unit area decreases earth intercepts only about 112 billionth of
rapidly with distance from the sun. The the sun's energy output, but this still
rule is that the heat flux through a unit amounts to 1.8 X 10" kilowatts, which is
area diminishes at the rate of the distance more than 300,000 times all the electrical
squared that it has traveled (Figure 3.2). generating capacity in the United States.
Thus, knowing the amount of heat received Obviously, then, any efforts by man to add
at the earth, and knowing (through astro- to or subtract from the heat budget of the
nomical measurement) the distance be- earth by burning fossil fuels, or even by
tween the earth and the sun, one can producing nuclear energy, will be puny
compute the emission power of the sun. compared to the amount of heat the earth
This turns out to be approximately receives from the sun every instant. Thus,
kilowatts, an enormous magnitude that ex- man cannot hope to alter the earth's climate
ceeds by many millions of times all the over broad areas by the artificial addition
electrical generating capacity on earth. If of heat. But man can hope to find ways

*There appears to be a little variation in solar emiission, perhaps of a cyclic nature. Recent measurements
from satellites have yielded an average value for the "solar constant" of 1370 W/m2 (1.963 ly/min).
16 Global Heat Exchange

to divert and convert the sun's energy into


more-useful forms and processes.
Knowing the emission power of the sun,
one can compute the temperature of the
sun's surface, since the sun radiates essen-
tially as a black body. It has been deter-
mined in the laboratory that a black body
(perfect radiator) radiates energy in pro-
portion to the fourth power of the absolute
(Kelvin) surface temperature of the body
(Stefan-Boltzmann Law). Knowing the en-
ergy emission, one can solve for the tem-
perature, which turns out to be approxi- TERRESTRIAL OUTGOING
mately 5784°K. This, of course, is much RADIATION
hotter than the earth's surface, which av-
erages about 59°F or 15°C or 288°K. There- 10 20pm
Visible region
fore, the sun emits much more heat energy WAVELENGTHS
than the earth does. Figure 3.3. Solar radiation is much greater
But the earth's temperature is a long in tnagnitude and at shorter wavelengths than
way from absolute zero, so the earth does is earth radiation.
radiate a significant amount of heat. Most
of the heat radiated to space by the earth-
atmosphere system is radiated by the at- trum of light. Most of the sun's energy is
mosphere at heights that are considerably emitted in a spectrum from 0.15pm to about
colder than the earth's surface. Terrestrial 4pm. Forty-one percent of it is visible, 9
(earth) radiation measured by satellites in- percent is ultraviolet (shorter than visible),
dicates that the earth-atmosphere system and 50 percent is infrared (longer than
has an average temperature of approxi- visible). Terrestrial radiation, on the other
mately 250°K. As a result, the sun emits hand, stretches from about 4pm to about
energy at a rate about 160,000 times that lOOpm, with maximum energy falling at
of the eartli-atmosphere system. about 10. lpm.
Not only do the two bodies emit heat
at very different rates, but they also emit Disposition of Insolation Within the I
it at very different wavelengths. All bodies Earth-Atmosphere System
not at absolute zero temperature radiate
energy over a considerable spectrum of The so-called "solar constant," as men- I
I
wavelengths, but this spectrum is arranged tioned before, at the outer limits of the
around a wavelength at which the maxi- atmosphere is approximately two calories
mum amount of energy is radiated, which per square centimeter per minute. But this
has been determined to be inversely pro- is on a theoretical stationary surface per-
portional to the temperature of the radiating pendicular to the sunlight, and since the
body (Wien's Law). Therefore, the hot sun earth is a rotating sphere, sunlight hits the
radiates its energy at much shorter wave- earth perpendicularly only at one point at 1
lengths than the cool earth-atmosphere sys- any instant. Half the earth's surface is
tem does (Figure 3.3). always in shadow; therefore, the average
The wavelength at which the sun emits amount of heat being received on the earth's
the most heat is about 0.47 micrometers surface is considerably less than two cal-
(pm = 1 millionth of a meter), which is in ories per square centimeter per minute. I
the yellow-green portion of the visible spec- The entire surface of the spherical earth
Global Heat Exchange 17

intercepts only the same amount of sunlight


as a disc the same diameter oriented per-
pendicular to the sunlight. Since the surface
area of a sphere is four times that of a
circle with the same diameter, the average
amount of energy being received on the
earth's surface is approximately 0.5 calories
per square centimeter per minute. This,
then, is the quantity of energy that one
works with when considering the heat bud-
get of the entire earth-atmosphere system.
Many things happen to this energy within
the atmosphere and at the earth-atmosphere
interface before it is finally lost back to Figure 3.4. Absorption of solar radiation.
space again. Arrow I represents the quantity of ultraviolet
Scattering and absorption attenuate the radiation at wavelengths less than O.12pm
sunlight by approximately half on its way absorbed by N2 and 0, in the high atmosphere
above 125 km. above sea level. Arrow 2
down through the atmosphere. Air mole- represents quantity of ultraviolet at wave-
cules and suspended particles scatter part lengths between 0.12 and O.2lpnz absorbed
of the sun's radiation in all directions. by O, mostly above 80 km. Arrow 3 represents
About half of this scattered light is lost quantity of ultraviolet at wavelengths between
back to space immediately and has no 0.21 and 0.34pm absorbed by 0, (ozone)
between 20 km. and 60 km. Arrow 4 rep-
heating effect on the earth. The rest finds resents quantity of near ultraviolet and visible
its way to the surface, bouncing back and light at wavelengths between 0.34 and 0.7pm
forth in all directions, and provides the transmitted to the earth's surface with some
indirect lighting that comes through the diininution due to scattering. Arrow 5 rep-
windows of buildings and other shaded resents quantity of near infrared at wave-
lengths between 0.7 and 4.0pm transmitted
places during the day. It also lights up the to the earth's surface, absorbed slightly by
daytime sky. Molecules, being very small, 0, and CO, in the upper atmosphere and
scatter primarily short-wave radiation and more strongly by H,O in the troposphere.
therefore cause the sky to appear blue or (From Understanding Our Atmospheric En-
violet. With larger particles in the air, such vironment, 2nd ed., by Neiburger, M., Edin-
ger, TG.,and Bonner, WD., Copyright O
as fog or smog, longer wavelengths are 1982 by W H . Freeman and Company. AN
scattered, and the sky takes on a more rights reserved.)
whitish hue. With heavy smog, some of
the light is absorbed, and the sky becomes
he yellowish-brown. Absorption is quite dif-
les ferent from scattering. With absorption the more than three-fourths of the atmosphere,
lis air molecules take up the radiant energy absorbs only very short wavelengths, gen-
er- and convert it to internal energy, whereby erally less than 0.12pm. Only a little of
he the motion of the molecules is increased this far ultraviolet radiation is in the sun-
the or their atomic makeup is changed. This light, and it is absorbed as soon as it enters
at process is manifested as temperature change. the atmosphere by the nitrogen at high
is Unlike solids and liquids, which radiate altitudes, generally above 125 kilometers.
age I and absorb heat much as a black body Here it dissociates molecular nitrogen, ion-
th's I
across a continuous spectrum of wave- izes the resultant atoms, and heats the
:al- lengths, gases radiate and absorb heat at rarified air to form the so-called "ther-
ute. selected wavelengths and are transparent mosphere" (Figure 3.4).
~rth to others. Nitrogen (N?), which makes up Oxygen (02) absorbs over a somewhat
18 Global Heat Exchange

wider range of wavelengths in the ultra- the different dispositions of incoming solar
violet and is also dissociated and ionized radiation, taking as 100 percent the 0.5
in the upper atmosphere. By the time the calories per square centimeter per minute
sunlight passes downward to about 100 that, on the average, reaches the outer limits
kilometers above the earth's surface, all the of the atmosphere. All together the various
far ultraviolet has been absorbed. Below constituents of the atmosphere just de-
100 kilometers a layer extending downward scribed absorb, on the average, 25 percent
to below 80 kilometers absorbs very little of the incoming solar radiation. An average
sunlight, because none of the radiation that of 35 percent of the incoming radiation is
is strongly absorbed reaches that low ao intercepted by clouds, which reflect about
altitude, and the density of the air is in- 22 percent back to space and allow I3
sufficient for weakly absorbed radiation to percent to reach the earth's surface as dif-
be important. The lack of absorption of fuse radiation. Another 13 percent is in-
much radiation centered on 80-kilometers tercepted by atmospheric molecules that
height causes the minimum of temperature scatter approximately 5 percent of the ra-
there, the mesopause (see Figure 2.1). diation back to space and allow 8 percent
Below 80 kilometers a little longer-wave to reach the earth's surface as diffise ra-
ultraviolet, around 0.2pm, is absorbed by diation. About 27 percent of the solar ra-
oxygen molecules (O?), some of which then diation penetrates directly to the earth's
disintegrate into atomic oxygen (0) and surface, where about 24 percent is absorbed
mix downward to join with diatomic ox- and 3 percent is reflected back to space.
ygen to produce ozone (0,). The ozone Hence, of the 100 percent of incoming
absorbs ultraviolet radiation of wavelengths sunlight, about 45 percent is absorbed at
up to 0.3pm, which heats up the atmosphere the earth's surface, 25 percent is absorbed
and produces the temperature maximum, in the atmosphere, and 30 percent is re-
the stratopause, at approximately 50-kilo- flected and scattered back to space by clouds,
meters height. Practically all the ultraviolet air molecules, and the earth's surface.
that is absorbed by ozone is used up by The 30 percent of sunlight that is re-
the time it descends to 20 kilometers above flected and scattered immediately back to
the earth's surface. This is fortunate, since space has no effect on the earth-atmosphere
this short-wave radiation, if it reached the system and is lost energy, except for the
earth, would deteriorate much living tissue fact that it causes the earth to shine. This
and perhaps make all life impossible. This 'is known as the albedo (reflectivity) of the
is the cause of the concern about the de- earth. Since most of the albedo is caused
struction of the ozonosphere concentrated by reflection from cloud tops and scattering
around 30 kilometers above the earth's by atmospheric n~olecules,a planetary body
surface by such things as supersonic trans- without an atmosphere, such as the earth's
port planes that would fly in the strato- moon, would have a much lower albedo
sphere, and by certain chemicals in aerosol than the earth. The moon has an average
sprays that eventually mix upward to that ;albedo of only about 7 percent. Therefore,
level. the earth is a much brighter object in the
The rest of the solar radiation, between heavens, when viewed from the moon, than
0.3 and 4.0pm, is not absorbed much by the moon is, when viewed from the earth.
the upper atmosphere. There is some ab- The astronauts on their way to the moon
sorption of visible and infrared radiation commented on this difference in brightness
at lower levels of the troposphere where of the two bodies as they looked back at
water vapor content is significant. the earth and exclaimed about its beauty
The left side of Figure 3.5 diagramati- as an object in space. On the other hand,
cally indicates the relative percentages of some of the largely gaseous planets have
Albedo= -30
Long-wave radiation t o space= -70
h
Reflected to space by:

Heat absorbed in
atrnosphere-

Direct radiation

and conveclio

Short-wave absorbed by land-water surface= +45

s- Total absorbed at surface= +I40


i
Lost from surface= -140
Figure 3.5. Average instantaneous heat exchanges among space, the atmosphere, and the earth's
surface, in percentages of incoming solar radiation (insolation).
20 Global Heat Exchange

albedos exceeding 75 percent and appear evaporation of moisture (latent heat of con-
much brighter in space than does the earth. densation). About 18 percent is accounted
I
The 45 percent of the sun's radiation for by this process. Another 11 percent
that is absorbed at the surface of the earth moves upward as sensible heat through
is used mostly to heat the surface of the conduction and convection. In this process,
earth and partially to evaporate water, which molecules of air come into contact with
requires much heat. As the earth's tem- molecules of earth and receive heat from
perature rises, it radiates more heat upward them. The heated air, being lighter than
into the atmosphere. But since the earth's colder air, moves upward in convective
surface is much cooler than that of the sun, currents and carries the heat into the at-
the heat radiated by the earth is at much mosphere. Thus, on the average, 140 percent
longer wavelengths than that from the sun. as much heat as is being received from the
These longer waves are unable to peneterate sun is moving upward from the earth's
the atmosphere as well as the short waves surface, and all but 15 percent of this is
from the sun, and therefore most of them being absorbed by the atmosphere. If one
are absorbed in the atmosphere. The at- remembers that the atmosphere is also ab-
mosphere then warms up and radiates heat sorbing 25 percent of the sunlight as it
both downward and upward. The down- moves down through the atmosphere, the
ward radiation of heat from the atmosphere total absorption by the atmosphere at any
adds to the heating of the earth's surface, +
instant is 125 25 = 150 percent. This
so that at any instant the earth's surface heat has to be disposed of by the atmo-
is receiving a quantity of heat that is equal sphere, and about 95 percent, on the av-
to about 140 percent of the sun's radiation. erage, is radiated back to the earth's surface,
j
Thus the atmosphere acts as an insulating and about 55 percent is radiated out to
coverlet over the earth-a reservoir of space. These percentages may be dimin-
heat-that is not lost immediately to space, ished by about I percent, which is trans-
but is absorbed and reradiated back and formed into the kinetic energy of motion
forth between atmosphere and earth a num- of the atmosphere, a small fraction of which
ber of times as it slowly filters out to space. is transmitted downward to drive the ocean
This holdover of heat in the atmosphere currents. But friction eventually reconverts
causes the earth's surface to be approxi- this kinetic energy back to heat energy.
/j mately 40°C warmer than it would be if It is very important to remember that
I there were no atmosphere and if there were of the 150 units absorbed by the atmosphere
YI an instantaneous exchange of heat between at any instant, the overwhelming amount
:i
I/ the surface and space. This entire process (125 percent) comes from below, and only
is known as the greenhouse effect, and it 25 percent from above. This is perhaps the
is the result of the fact that the atmosphere single most important fact about the earth's
is not as transparent to long waves as it climate. If it were the other way around
is to short waves. and the atmosphere were heated primarily
At any instant, the earth's surface ra- from above, the atmosphere would be ab-
diates upward, on the average, 111 percent solutely stable and would not circulate, and
as much energy as comes in at the top of there would be no weather as we know it,
the atmosphere from the sun (see right side, with cloud formation, precipitation, and so
Figure 3.5). Most of this, 96 percent, is forth. But as it is, the pot is constantly
absorbed by the atmosphere, and only 15 being boiled from below, and the atmo-
percent goes directly out to space. Heat sphere is a turbulent one.
also moves upward from the earth's surface Over the long run, there must be balances
into the atmosphere through the process of of incoming and outgoing heat at the earth's
Global Heat Exchange 21

surface, at the outer limit of the atmosphere, of soil. In many cases, from the viewpoint
and within the atmosphere; otherwise there of humans, it is desirable to try to increase
would be heating or cooling trends at these this usable amount of heat energy. In some
levels. Figure 3.5 shows that these balances ways it can be altered significantly. In most
do in fact exist. At the top of the atmo- cases the greatest shifts in forms of heat
sphere, 100 percent radiation is received can probably be effected by changes in
as short-wave radiation from the sun. Of albedo. As can be seen in Figure 3.6, dif-
this short-wave radiation, 22 percent is ferent types of surfaces have very different
immediately reflected back to space by reflectivities. Fresh snow and thick clouds
clouds, 3 percent is reflected back from the reflect more than 75 percent of the incident
earth's surface, and 5 percent is scattered radiation, whereas wet earth may reflect as
to space by atmospheric molecules. In ad- little as 5 percent. Water has the lowest
dition to this 30 percent short-wave loss, reflectivity if the radiation is incident at a
55 percent long waves are radiated to space perpendicular angle, but at low angles water
from the atmosphere and 15 percent long becomes quite reflective. Albedos of many
waves from the earth's surface, for a total types of surfaces vary significantly accord-
of 100 percent. Within the atmosphere are ing to both angle and wavelength of the
absorbed 25 percent of the sun's short-wave incident radiation. Also, cloud cover may
radiation, 96 percent of the earth's long- affect the albedo of the underlying surface.
wave radiation, 18 percent latent heat of A classic example, often cited to illustrate
evaporation, and 11 percent sensible heat the profound results that might be expected
(temperature rise) due to conduction and by changing the albedo, involves the in-
convection between the earth's surface and triguing notion of melting the Arctic ice
the atmosphere, for a total of 150 percent. cap. In its present state, the Arctic is a
This is lost as follows: 95 percent radiated frozen sea that presents a highly reflective
downward from the atmosphere to the ice-and-snow surface to the small amount
earth's surface and 55 percent radiated of incident sunlight reaching it during the
upward to space. At the earth's surface, 45 year. Therefore, most of the small amount
percent of the short-wave radiation from of heat that does reach it is immediately
the sun is absorbed and 95 percent of the lost back. to space through reflection. If the
long wave radiation from the atmosphere, reflectivity of the ice-and-snow surface could
for a total input of 140 percent. This is be reduced by, say, covering it with coal
balanced by 111 percent movement upward dust or some other substance, more of the
as long-wave radiation, 18 percent as latent incident sunlight would be absorbed and
heat of evaporation, and 11 percent as available for melting the ice. Over a few
turbulent heat through conduction and con- years' time, perhaps as little as seven or
vection, for a total of 140 percent. eight, the Arctic ice cap, which averages
All the numbers in Figure 3.5 refer to only about three meters thick, might melt.
radiated heat, except that being carried Once melted, the sea would remain un-
upward from the earth's surface by tur- frozen because the open water surface, hav-
bulent air currents, 18 percent as latent ing a significantly lower albedo than ice
heat of evaporation and 11 percent as sen- and snow, would absorb enough incident
sible heat. This 29 percent is referred to sunlight to maintain its surface temperature
as the net radiation balance at the earth's above freezing.
surface, and in essence is the budget of This is an irreversible process, according
heat energy available on the earth's surface to present technology and economic fea-
for natural and human processes, such as sibility, so before one undertook such a
the growing of plants and the weathering project one should be completely sure of
22 Global Heat Exchange

ALBEDO (%)
10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90

SOlL I b l a c k . m o i s t l
ROAD (black top)
FOREST Iconiferous)
MERCURY
M O O N

S O l L Iblack.dry1
FOREST (broadleaf)

S A N D (wet.sun near zenith)


1-1 GRASS (green)
ROAD Iconcrete)
CORN FIELD
W H E A T FIELD
M A R S

GRASS (dry)
S A N D Idry.sun n e a r zenith)
I:;is. lr-
~*%rw DESERTF2I.. I
.. . ?.:.. CIRRUS & CIRROSTRATUS CLOUDS
. . . . . . ;.. . rr>:2&Wsaa@&:l
( - P : < ~:.:.i-

:thi"'.-;?.',:.:F::* STRATuS~CLOUDS;Z>~;~g#@thi2k::
.EARTH
- -... ,. I
I""".:..CSEA*,~CE~~~~+@~$
S A N D (wet,sun near horizon)
OLD S N O W
Imxv;*:
,..,-..,.,, ,CUMULON~fMBUSKEOUDS+*~:2~3%.i^."I
.VENUS

FRESH SNOW
SAND (dry,sun near horizon) 1-

I
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90

ALBEDO (%)
Figure 3.6. Albedos of various kinds of surfaces.

the consequences. As will be explained in probably bring on at least partial melting


Chapter 6,,such a change in the Arctic of ice caps on Greenland, Antarctica, and
might effect a circulation change in the high mountains, which would cause a cat-
atmosphere of the entire Northern Hemi- astrophic rise in sea level. Therefore, from
sphere, or even the whole earth, and there- lack of complete knowledge about the con-
fore the consequences are not as simple as sequences of such action, no one has yet
might at first be assumed. Not only would attempted such a grandiose change on the
there be an expansion of thermal belts face of the earth, even though it is phys-
northward, but areas that are now humid ically, and perhaps even economically, pos-
might be turned into deserts, and so forth. sible.
Also, such a change in the Arctic would Of much more subtle nature, and less
Global Heat Exchange 23

risky, are heat transfers effected by irri- marily a cooling process and, if excessive,
gation, which all seem to be beneficial. can place extreme stress on a plant because
Irrigation is an age-old practice used to the plant is trying to evaporate water from
add water to dry land. But recently it has its leaves faster than it is taking it up
been discovered that, in addition, irrigation through its roots. The plant must then resort
normally brings about a number of bene- to a defense mechanism such as wilting,
ficial and significant shifts in the heat bud- which over a prolonged period is detri-
get at the earth's surface. By adding water mental to its growth. Of course, some tran-
to dry soil the albedo is reduced, thereby spiration of moisture through the plant is
allowing for greater absorption of incoming necessary to circulate nutrients from the
heat energy. At the same time the tem- soil upward into the plant, but this requires
perature of the surface of the earth is only a very small circulation of moisture.
lowered, because less heat goes into sensible Thus, in most cases reduced transpiration
heat and is instead transformed into latent rates are beneficial to plant growth.
heat of evaporation, which then is un- In summary, then, irrigation not only
available for heating the atmosphere. Since adds the necessary water for plant growth,
the earth is cooler, it radiates less heat, but also increases the net radiation balance
and therefore the energy budget is enhanced at the earth's surface by cooling the surface
by a smaller loss of heat through terrestrial of the earth, thereby transferring heat en-
radiation. ergy from sensible processes to latent heat
If one goes to the expense of irrigating processes. .And much of the latent heat is
land, it is probably for growing crops on transferred from simple evaporation pro-
it. This will l~kelyfurther reduce its re- cesses to more useful transpiration pro-
flectivity. The crops will transpire much cesses.
moisture, which will Increase the latent heat The foregoing estimates of the compo-
component of the heat transfer from earth nents of the earth-atmosphere heat budget
to atmosphere. It will also transfer rather are just that and nothing more-estimates
useless evaporation from a soil surface into of average conditions over the entire earth.
moisture transfer through transpiration, Not all the components are measurable with
which will effect plant growth. The crops present technology: some have been derived
will shade the earth, thereby further re- from empirically determined relationships,
ducing the earth's surface temperature and and others have been realized only as re-
terrestrial radiation, and will also slow siduals in equations. The latter might en-
down air movement so that evaporation compass considerable error if errors were
rates are reduced. The reduction of surface inherent in measurements of the other vari-
temperature and motion of the air will ables, since the residuals would absorb the
necessitate less transpiration from each sum of the errors. Thus, magnitudes will
plant, so that moisture is utilized more be found to vary from one textbook to
efficiently by each plant. another, but the nature of the variables
Generally, plant growth is not a function thkmselves are the same, and the quanti-
of transpiration rate. Transpiration is pri- tative estimates are better than mere guesses.
4 SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL
HEAT BUDGET VARIATION

The heat budget components vary greatly ical shape of the earth and its rotation and
from place to place and from time to time revolution about the sun. The earth re-
at any one place. Insolation varies by lat- volves around the sun approximately once
itude because the earth is a sphere. It varies per year in a slightly elliptical orbit with
seasonally at any one place because the the sun at one focus of the ellipse. The
earth is rotating on an axis, revolving about distance between the earth and the sun
the sun, and the axis of rotation is inclined averages about 150 million kilometers (93
with respect to the orbit around the sun. million miles). This distance varies by about
By the same token, the insolation varies 1.7 percent. The greatest distance, aplzelion,
with time of day because the sun comes occurs on 5 July, and the shortest distance,
up in the east, crosses the zenith at noon, periheliorz, occurs on 4 January. This vari-
and sets in the west, thereby causing the ation in distance causes a plus or minus
angle of incidence at any point on the earth 3.4 percent variation in heat receipt by
to vary constantly during the day. surfaces perpendicular to the sun's rays at
Undulations in the earth's surface, of the outer limit of the atmosphere. At the
course, vary the amounts of heat received surface of the earth, however, local factors
because of different angles of slope. A north generally mask this variation.
slope obviously receives less heat than a
south slope in the middle and high latitudes
of the Northern Hemisphere. In the morn- Angle of
ing an east slope will receive more heat, Much more important than distance in
and in the afternoon a west slope. determining the amount of heat received
In addition to all these geometrical re- is the curvature ofthe earth's surface, which
lationships, the irregularities of atmo- varies the angle at which the sunlight falls
spheric conditions, particularly clouds and on the earth. Since the earth is so far away
humidity, as well as the characteristics of from the sun and such a small speck in
the receiving surface, complicate the pattern space compared to the sun, the small amount
immeasurably. Since the earth's surface is of sun's energy that is incident upon the
approximately three-fourths water, the earth's surface has been radiated from only
widely varying albedo of water with angle a very small part -of the sun's surface, which
of incident sunlight is an important vari- for practical purposes can be considered
able. as a flat surface, and the rays then can be
considered to be parallel to each other.
Sun-Earth Relations Therefore, the angle at which the sun's rays
strike the earth's surface d e ~ e n d essentiallv
s
First, consider the regularly varying spatial on the latitude of the earth and is a coi-
characteristics brought about by the spher-
: Spatial and Temporal Heat Budget Variation 25

plement to the angle of latitude. That is,


if the sun is directly overhead at the equator, Table 4.1 Atmospheric Thickness and
which is 0" latitude, the angle of incidence Radiation Intensity on a
Horizontal Surface for Varying
will be 90". At 30" latitude the angle of Sun Altitude above the Horizon,
incidence will be 60", at 45" latitude, 45", Assuming a Transmission
Coefficient of 78 Percent
and so forth. At the pole, 90" latitude, the
angle of incidence will be zero.
A direct ray yields more heat per unit Number of
att~pspheres Radiation
area than an oblique ray does, for three Sun's rays must intensity
reasons. First, the vertical ray will spread altitude pass through (in percent)
over a smaller area when it hits the earth's
surface than a slanting ray will. Second,
the slanting ray will pass through a greater
thickness of atmosphere than the vertical
ray and therefore become more attenuated
on its way through the atmosphere. When
the sun is only 5" above the horizon, its
rays must travel through almost eleven times
as much atmosphere as when the rays are
perpendicular. The radiation intensity on
a horizontal surface, then, is little more
than 1 percent what it is when the rays
are perpendicular (Table 4.1). And third,
the albedo over many surfaces is greater
for slanting rays than for direct rays. reach only to 66.5" latitude. The direct rays
In addition to the facts that the earth of the sun are now overhead at 23.5"s
is spherical and is revolving around the latitude. These extreme positions of the
sun, it is also spinning on an axis once a direct and tangent rays of the sun set the
day, and this axis of rotation is tilted at positions of the Tropic of Cancer at 23.5"N
an angle approximately 23.5" away from latitude, the Tropic of Capricorn at 23.55
the perpendicular to the orbit of revolution latitude, the Arctic Circle at 66.5"N latitude,
around the sun. This tilt of the axis remains and the Antarctic Circle at 66.5"s latitude.
essentially parallel to itself as the earth
revolves about the sun, so that at different
points in the orbit of revolution different
Daylight Period
portions of the earth's surface are exposed Not only does the angle vary at which the
to sunlight (Figure 4.1). This combination sun's rays are incident upon the earth's
of circumstances produces the seasons. surface, but also the length of daylight
On approximately 21 June the north pole varies with latitude because of the tilt of
is tilted most directly toward the sun, and the axis. As can be seen in Figure 4.2, the
the sun's last tangent rays pass across the circle of illumination, which divides the
pole to 66.5"N latitude on the other side earth into a light half and a dark half,
(Figure 4.2). At this time the direct rays includes the entire North Polar area south-
of the sun are overhead at 23.5"N latitude. ward to the Arcfic Circle within the light
On 21 December the situation is reversed: half on 21 June (summer solstice) and
the south pole is tilted toward the sun, the within the dark half on 21 December (win-
north pole away from it, and the last tangent ter solstice). This means that on 21 June
ravs of the sun in the Northern Hemisphere the ole and all the area around it south-
26 Spatial and Temporal Heat Budget Variation

March 21

Figure 4.1. Changes in earth's position relative to the sun


during the course of a year.

ward to the Arctic Circle receives sunlight summer solstice is approached, falls rapidly
.
i,
,
,I
all 24 hours of the day, while on 21 De- during autumn, and tapers off again as
cember this area receives no direct sunlight winter is approached (see Table 4.2). For
at all. On 21 March and 23 September the instance, at 40" latitude, the daylight period
circle of illumination passes through the lengthens from 9 hours 37 minutes on 15
i.:
poles, and therefore all points on the earth's January to 10 hours 42 minutes on 15
surface have 12 hours of daylight and 12 February, a change of 1 hour 5 minutes
hours of darkness on these dates, which during the month. It lengthens from 11
i 1! are called the vernal (spring) and autumnal hours 53 minutes on 15 March to 13 hours
(fall) equinoxes. 14 minutes on 15 April, a change of 1 hour
' Jlii 21 minutes during that month. From 15
The length of daylight period at any
I I/. .place at any date can be judged by the May to 15 June it lengthens from 14 hours
portion of the latitudinal parallel that falls 22 minutes to 15 hours, a change of only
within the lighted half of the earth relative 38 minutes.
to the portion that falls within the darkened
1 half (Table 4.2). At the equator there are Latitudinal Effects on
12 hours of daylight and 12 hours of dark- Insolation Receipts
ness every day of the year. This varies more
widely thefarther one goes toward the poles, Latitude, then, exercises two variables on
I and at the poles themselves there is a six-
months' daylight period followed by a six-
insolation receipt, angle of incidence and
length of daylight period. These sometimes
months' darkness period. At intermediate vary with latitude in the same direction
positions between the equator and poles, and sometimes in opposite directions to
,
g
, the length of daylight period increases rap- produce a composite latitudinal heat dis-
idly during spring, then levels off as the tribution as shown in Figure 4.3. In the
' Spatial and Temporal Heat Budget Variation 27

I 1
<

6. 90'~
JUNE SOLSTICE E,

i 1
EQUINOXES F.

,
DECEMBER SOLSTICE
Figure 4.2. The circle of illumination during the solstices and equinoxes.
(Modified from John B. Leighly.)

Northern Hemisphere on 21 June (s) the the outer limit of ihe atmosphere. Since
sun at noon is directly overhead at 23.5"N from the equator to the Tropic of Cancer,
latitude. The elevation above the horizon both the angle of incidence and the daylight
( H ) decreases in both directions from 90" period increase initially, the amount of
at the Tropic of Cancer to 66.5" at the insolation received increases with latitude.
equator and 23.5" at the pole. The length But shortly poleward of the Tropic of Can-
of day (D) varies with latitude from 12 cer, the insolation begins to decrease slightly
hours at the equator, slowly at first and because the angle of incidence is decreasing
then more rapidly, until it reaches 24 hours faster than the daylight period is increasing.
at 66.5", at which it remains all the way Poleward of about 50" latitude, however,
to the pole. These two curves, marked H, the daylight period increases more rapidly
and D, in the diagram, add up graphically than the angle of incidence decreases, and
to I,, the amount of insolation received at the insolation receipt increases again all
28 Spatial and Temporal Heat Budget Variation

Table 4.2 Length of Daylight Period by Latitude on the 15th of Each Month, in Hours and
Minutes (not including light refracted by the atmosphere)

0" 1O" 20° 30" 40" 50' 60" 70" 80° 90"

Jan.
Feb.
Mar.
Apr.
May
June
July
Aug.
Sept.
Oct.
NOV.
Dec.

the way to the pole. The pole at this time during winter than during summer. Hence,
of the year at the top of the atmosphere latitudinal changes in temperature are much
receives more heat energy over a 24-hour greater in the middle latitudes during win-
period than any other latitude. ter, which leads to a more vigorous at-
On 21 December (w), on the other hand, mospheric circulation during winter.
the sun is directly over the Tropic of Cap- At the equinoxes (E), every latitude re-
ricorn, 23.53 latitude, and the equator ceives 12 hours of daylight and 12 hours
again. experiences a sun that at noon stands of darkness. The sun is directly overhead
only 66.5" above the horizon. The length at the equator, and the angle of incidence,
of the daylight period at the equator is 12 HE, decreases consistently from 90" at the
hours, as is true throughout the year. Both equator to zero at the pole. Since the length
the angle of incidence, H,", and the length of daylight period, D,, does not vary at
of daylight period, D decrease rapidly this time of year, the amount of insolation
from the equator to 66.5"N latitude, where received, I,, varies directly with the angle
they both become zero and remain at that of incidence of the sunlight on the earth.
level all the way to the pole. Thus, in the The longest and shortest days of the year
Northern Hemisphere the insolation re- are known as the summer and winter sol-
ceipt, I,., decreases steadily from a maxi- stices, respectively. In the Northern Hemi-
mum over the equator to zero at the Arctic sphere these fall approximately on 21 June
Circle and beyond. Insolation over the and 21 December. In the Southern Hemi-
equator at this time of year is slightly greater sphere they are just the reverse. Since the
than it was on 21 June, because the earth earth does not revolve around the sun in
is now closer to the sun. exactly 365 days, every fourth year is a
It is evident that in the middle latitudes, leap year (has an extra day). Thus, the dates
the latitudinal changes of daylight period of the solstices and equinoxes vary one or
and angle of incidence are in the same two days from year to year. Also, the earth's
direction during winter but in opposite axis itself rotates slowly during periods of
directions during summer. Thus, latitudinal about 26,000 years. Therefore, the seasons
differences in insolation are much greater precess slowly through time. In 13,000 years,
Spatial and Temporal Heat Budget Variation 29

NORTH LATITUDE
Figure 4.3. Angle o f sziiz's rays or height above the horizon (H), day
length (D), and insolatioiz receipt (I) at the top of the atnzosphere, by
latitude, during the szirnrner (s) a i d winler (wg solstices and the equinoxes
(E).

the seasons will be just the reverse of what precess through the years, this coincidence
they are now: the Northern Hemisphere will become less marked.
winter solstice will fall in June and the The Southern Hemisphere, of course, is 1,

summer solstice in December. closest to the sun during its summer season
It happens that at present the summer and farthest from the sun during its winter
solstice of the Northern Hemisphere nearly season. Knowing this one fact, one might
coincides with the position of the earth at conclude that the Southern Hemisphere
aphelion (farthest point from the sun), and would have greater seasonal extremes than . .
the winter solstice nearly coincides with the Northern Hemisphere does. This, in
the timing of the earth in its position at fact, is true in the case of insolation receipt.
perihelion (closest to the sun). The angle As far as resultant surface temperatures are
of tilt of the pole toward the sun and the concerned, however, the situation is the
nearest and farthest distances of the earth reverse. The greater preponderance of water
in its orbit from the sun are not one and in the Southern Hemisphere tempers sea-
the same thing, and there is no reason for sonal extremes there.
them to coincide in time. As the seasons Figure 4.4 shows the distribution of in-
, ,
! I ~~~~ ~'
!
30 Spatial and Temporal Heat Budget Variation 1
i
solation at the outer limit of the atmosphere Also, sky (scattered) radiation is added to
by month and latitude. It can be seen that direct radiation, so that total daily global
the greatest values on the entire earth are radiation in excess of 30 MJ/m2 (720 lang-
realized over the poles during their short leys) is not rare even at low altitudes, and
summer seasons, and the South Pole re- mountain stations may experience even
ceives slightly more insolation during its higher values. On cloudy days, of course,
summer than the North Pole does during transmissivity is reduced. Figure 4.6 depicts
its summer, because of the ellipticity of the pattern of insolation receipt at the
the orbit. The equator varies the least earth's surface as actually measured. Here
through the year and receives its maximum the pattern is far from a purely zonal
insolation during the equinoxes. Over the (latitudinal) one. The greatest amounts are
course of the year the equator receives received in such desert areas as the Sahara
considerably more heat than any other lat- of northern Africa, the Kalahari of southern
itude. Africa, central Australia, and southwestern
If the effects of a clear atmosphere are United States and northwestern Mexico.
added, assuming 70 percent transmission Here the skies are generally clear and the
through the normal thickness of the at- air relatively free of moisture. The equator,
mosphere, the distribution of insolation on the other hand, which receives the most
changes significantly (Figure 4.5). Since the heat during the year at the outer limits of
slanting rays in the high latitudes must pass the atmosphere, has considerable heat at-
through more atmosphere, the insolation is tenuation due to great amounts of cloud-
depleted more at high latitudes than at low iness and high humidity content. (The rea-
latitudes. Heat receipt is much less every- sons for such distributions of clouds and
where on the earth's surface with the at- humidity will become clear later when at-
mosphere than without it, but it reduces mospheric circulation and resultant cloud
from more than 44 megajoules/square me- conditions are discussed.) Seasonal patterns
ter (1000 langleys) per day to only about of insolation are similar to the annual
18 MJ/m2 (450 langleys) per day at the pattern, with some latitudinal shifts cor-
pole, while it declines only from about 40 responding to shifts in the angle of inci-
MJ/m2 (925 langleys) per day to about 25 dence of the sun and the length of daylight
MJ/m' (575 langleys) per day at 30" latitude period.
during the summer solstice. The result is
that the maximum heat receipt at the earth's Heat Exchange at the
surface during the solstice periods occurs
Earth's Surface
in the middle latitudes centered on about
30"-35" latitude. Maximum heating at the
Radiation Balance
earth's surface thus shifts during the year
over a span of latitude averaging about 65", The same dry atmospheric conditions that
more than the 47"-latitude shift of the direct allow maximum insolation over dry land
rays of the sun. areas also allow maximum terrestrial ra-
diation to escape to space, and therefore
these areas utilize the heat they receive
Atmospheric Effects very inefficiently and show up as minimum
This is still a very hypothetical picture, areas of radiation balance at the earth's
since it does not take into account the state surface (Figure 4.7). The world pattern of
of the atmosphere, primarily clouds and radiation balance, then, is much different
moisture content. The assumed transmis- from that of radiation receipt. Whereas land
sivity of 70 percent is frequently exceeded. areas, with their lower atmospheric mois-
LATITUDE
w W La m c
c
a m 0
0 0 0 0 0
0 0 0

w
O
m -
0
LATITUDE
0
u
0
0)
0
a
0
0
34 Spatial and Temporal Heat Budget Va riation

ture contents, generally receive more in- Land, and Severnaya Zemlya in the Arctic
solation than adjacent water areas and the north of Eurasia.
highest values of all are in the large deserts
of the world, the radiation balance pattern
Latent Heat Exchange
generally shows higher values over water
than over adjacent land, and the lowest As might be expected, much of the radiation
values of all occur over the great subtropical balance over the oceans is used as latent
deserts, such as the Sahara and Australia, heat to evaporate water, particularly in
or in the earth's high-mountain regions, subtropical latitudes where the atmosphere
where the air is thin and low in moisture. is usually clear of clouds and relatively dry
The deserts and high mountains of the (Figure 4.8). Values are even higher in
earth have often been called the "windows certain ocean areas adjacent to middle lat-
of the world," because both areas are as- itude continents, such as off the east coast
sociated with atmosphere that allows ready of the United States and portions of the
passage of both incoming and outgoing western North Pacific next to Japan. In
radiation. these middle-latitude areas the excessive
In general, oceans absorb much more of evaporation takes place primarily during
the incoming solar radiation than land sur- winter. (The reasons for this will be dis-
faces, and radiate much less back to space cussed in Chapter 7.) The land masses,
because of their consistently moderate tem- where moisture generally is not as readily
peratures. The oceans thus show a high available to be evaporated, show much
radiation balance and serve as a huge res- lower values, although some of the equa-
ervoir for heat storage on the earth. torial land areas, such as the Amazon Basin,
It is interesting to note that over the the Congo, and the Indonesian Islands, still
entire course of the year, the radiation show relatively high values.
balance at the earth's surface almost every-
where is positive. The pattern of radiation
balance, of course, changes drastically with
Sensible Heat Exchange
seasons. From May through August all the The sensible heat exchange map is almost
earth's surface, except for the Southern the exact complement of the evaporation
Hemisphere south of about 42"s latitude map (Figure 4.9). Heat is moved upward
and perhaps parts of the Arctic, shows a through conduction and convection (as an
positive radiation balance. By September air temperature increase) most rapidly where
a negative balance begins to show up on the earth's surface is hottest-the earth's
the northern fringes of the Canadian Ar- subtropical deserts, such as the Sahara and
chipelago and the Arctic islands off Siberia. Kalahari in Africa and the large Australian
This spreads rapidly southward in suc- desert. The oceans, with their relatively
ceeding months and reaches a latitude of cool summer temperatures, engage in very
about 40"N (37"N over Japan) at its max- little sensible heat exchange with the at-
imum extent during the Northern Hemi- mosphere above them. A few oceanic areas,
sphere winter solstice in December. The such as the North Atlantic and western
area of negative radiation balance begins Rorth Pacific, where large, warm ocean
to recede northward again in January, and currents carry anomalously warm waters
by April it has practically disappeared off into middle and higher latitudes, show high
the Northern Hemisphere continents except values of sensible heat exchange, particu-
for the northern islands in the Canadian larly in winter. The Barents Sea north of
Archipelago and Spitsbergen, Franz Joseph Scandinavia is outstanding in this respect.
: Spatial and Temporal Heat Budget Variation 37

On the other hand, some ocean areas with RADIATION (105' col/cm /year)
cool surface currents experience a sensible 0 1 2
90
heat exchange that is directed downward 80
from the atmosphere to the water. 70

Heat Balance of the


Earth-Atmosphere System
Over the course of a year, the net radiation
balance at the earth's surface is positive
over most of the earth. Therefore, the net
radiation balance of the atmosphere must
be negative for the radiation balance of the
earth-atmosphere system to be zero so there
is no net heating or cooling over a long
period of time. Most of the heat lost to
space is radiated from the atmosphere, par-
ticularly from cloud tops. The atmosphere
thus has a radiation balance of approxi-
mately -80 kilolangleys per year at every
latitude. It varies slightly by latitude, but
not very much. The atmosphere, of course,
makes up for this heat deficit by receipt
from the surface of the earth. 0
0 5 10 15 20 25
NORTHWARD ENERGY TRANSFER
Horizontal Transfers of Heat
The earth-atmosphere system has a net gain Figure 4.10. Average annual incoming and
of heat from approximately 32"N latitude outgoing radiation for the earth-atmosphere
system and the poleward transfer of heat.
to 28"s latitude. and a net loss poleward
from those latitudes. Figure 4.10 shows
these relationships for the Northern Hemi-
sphere. The latitudinal scale is a cosine one The dashed line in Figure 4.10 indicates
in order to represent equivalent areas of roughly the magnitude of the heat flux by
the earth's surface properly. Since the par- latitude. It is obvious that the greatest heat
allels of latitude become shorter from equa- flux is in the middle latitudes around
tor to pole, there is less area between equal 30"-40", for all the heat that moves from
latitudinal intervals near the poles than low latitudes to high latitudes must pass
near the equator. Half the earth's surface through the middle latitudes. This neces-
falls between 30"s latitude and 30"N lat- sitates a maximum of air movement in the
itude. In Figure 4.10 it can be seen that middle latitudes to effect the heat transfer.
the surplus in the low latitudes balances In Chapters 6 and 12 it will become evident
the deficit in the middle and high latitudes. that the middle latitudes, on the average,
For the low latitudes to get rid of surplus have the highest wind speeds and are the
heat and for the high latitudes to radiate stormiest and in general, climatically most
more heat to space than they receive from vigorous of the earth's zones.
the sun. there must be a horizontal transfer The transfer of heat from low latitudes
of heat from low latitudes to high latitudes. to high latitudes is accomplished by three
38 Spatial and Temporal Heat Budget Variation
ij

1(1 LATITUDE
Figure 4.11. ,herage ai?ilual horizontal heat transfers, in l O I 9 kilocalories. 'lfier U'.D.
IRA; SeNers, Physical Climatology [Chicago: Uni1'ersity o f Chicago Press, 19651. O 1965 by
the Uilirersit)~o f Chicago. All rights reserved.)
,$

means (see Figure 4.11). The largest com- oration on earth takes place over the sub-
ponent is sensible heat transfer in the at- tropical oceans, latent heat moves both
mosphere; that is, the movement of warmer equatorward and poleward from the sub-
air into higher latitudes. In each hemisphere tropical areas on either side of the equator.
there i s a fairly simple poleward movement, Since the magnitude of latent heat move-
with maximum flux taking place in the ment is considerably smaller than that of
middle latitudes. Ocean currents tend to sensible heat movement in the atmosphere
show the same pattern of heat transfer, at and oceans combined, this Inore compli-
lesser magnitudes. The movement of latent cated pattern of latent heat transfer does
heat via water vapor. however, shows a not perceptibly affect the overall pattern of
! different pattern. Since most of the evap- heat transfer.
5 1 ATMOSPHERIC PRESSURE
I AND MOTION

Since different amounts of heat energy are though not very dense, adds up to con-
received at different points on the earth's siderable weight when one considers the
surface, and since these inputs change from entire thickness of the atmosphere attracted
time to time at any one place, differences by the force ofgravity to the earth's surface.
in density are set up in the earth's at- On the average at sea level, the atmosphere
mosphere that cause atmospheric motion. weighs approximately one kilogram per
Heat energy is the driving force that ini- square centimeter (14.7 pounds per square
tiates the motion, but once in motion, the inch). This is quite a great weight if one
atmosphere is acted upon by such forces considers how many square centimeters are
as that due to the rotation of the earth, on, say, the surface of the human body or
and a circulation evolves that tends to the roof of a building. For instance, the
maintain itself and take on a character of ceiling of a room 3 X 4 meters square
its own, which in turn influences air pres- would contain 120,000 square centimeters,
sure and temperature. Thus, on any portion which would be under a n atmospheric
of the earth's surface, atmospheric motion weight of 120 metric tons. Of course, in a
and the heat budget must be considered as gas, pressure is exerted equally in all di-
major controls on climatic elements. In the rections, and as long as there is as much
middle latitudes, particularly, the surface air pressure inside a room as outside there
air temperature on any given day is prob- is no net force on the structure. But if the
ably due more to movements of air over air were suddenly evacuated from the room,
the region than to the radiation balance at it is easy to see that the structure would
that point on the earth's surface. The same collapse under the great weight of the at-
is true of atmospheric humidity, cloud for- mosphere.
mation, precipitation, and so forth. There-
fore, a knowledge of the movements in the
Measurement and Expression
atmosphere and their consequences is all-
important. Since this motion is a result of The most accurate instrument for measur-
atmospheric pressure differences, it is nec- ing air pressure is the mercurial barometer,
essary to define atmospheric pressure. which consists of an evacuated glass tube
about one meter long, mounted vertically,
with a surface of mercury at the base. The
Air Pressure weight of the air pressing down on the
The mixture of gases that make up the mercury surface balances a column of mer-
atmosphere has a certain mass and, al- cury in the tube equal in weight to the
40 Atmospheric Pressure and Motion

weight of the atmosphere. Thus, air pressure of mercury equals approximately 34 mil-
is often given in terms of the height of the libars.
column of mercury balanced by the air.
Normal sea-level pressure in these terms
Variation
is 76 centimeters or 29.92 inches.
Another kind of instrument is the ane- Since the atmosphere is usually involved
roid barometer, which consists of an evac- in some motion, and different amounts of
uated metal wafer that expands and con- heat energy are being expended in different
tracts with air pressure and moves a pointer ways, atmospheric pressure undergoes con-
across a scale. Since this is entirely me- stant variation at any given point on the
chanical, contains no liquids, and can be earth's surface and varies from place to
moved easily and held in any position, it place at any given time. In a horizontal
is much more convenient to use. It is not direction, the variations are not great. At
as accurate as the mercurial barometer, sea level the variation is usually no more
however. Since, for most purposes, not the than 5 percent on either side of the normal,
absolute pressure but the relative pressure which is probably not enough for the human
from one place to another or the change body to detect consciously. Air pressure
at a givsn point over time is important, varies much more rapidly with height, how-
an instrument called a barograph was in- ever; as was pointed out before, the air
vented to show a continuous trace of air pressure decreases by half about every
pressure over time. This uses an aneroid 5000-6000 meters. Therefore, roughly half
barometer to move a pen arm on a graph the mass of the atmosphere lies below 5500
paper wrapped around a slowly rotating meters (18,000 feet). Anyone who has
cylinder, thereby tracing a continual record climbed a high mountain or flown in an
of the changes of air pressure. unpressurized airplane knows that changes
Neither pounds per square inch nor inches in air pressure of this magnitude can cause
or centimeters of mercury are very con- extreme reactions in the human body, rang-
venient for plugging into scientific equa- ing from accelerated breathing and general
tions, and therefore most of the world has fatigue in milder cases, to severe headaches,
gone to the expression of air pressure in nosebleeds, nausea, dizziness, and fainting,
millibars (mb). Since one millibar equals in more severe cases.
1000 dynes per square centimeter, and one Although the horizontal variations in air
dyne equals one gram-centimeter per sec- pressure might not be of physiological sig-
ond per second, the millibar is based on nificance, they are all-important to atmo-
the c.g.s. system and is convenient to use spheric motion. And since atmospheric mo-
in scientific equations. Average sea-level tion is such an important control on all
pressure in millibars is 1013.2. Almost all other weather phenomena. the distribution
atmospheric pressures recorded in the of air pressure over the earth's surface at
United States since 1940 have been ex- any given time is probably the single most
pressed in millibars, as is true in most of important tool for predicting a whole range
the rest of the world.* Nevertheless, airports of weather elements. Because the motion
still report altimeter settings in inches of itself, once initiated by heat differences,
mercury, so it is important to be able to becomes a control on the air pressure pat-
convert from one to the other. One inch tern, there is a feedback mechanism be-

*The recently adopted SI system specifies the kilopascal (kPa) as the official unit of air pressure. One
1
3

kPa equals 10 mb. One pascal (Pa) equals one newton (N) per square meter, where one newton is the force 3
that, acting on a mass of one lulogram, produces an acceleration of one meter per second per second. 9
Atmospheric Pressure and Motion 41

tween the two that requires air pressure


and motion to be considered jointly. First
to be considered are broad-scale patterns
of pressure and motion over the earth, and
then smaller circulation systems. So we
may grasp the workings of the general cir-
culation of the atmosphere, a simple case
will be considered first, and then compli-
cations will be added one at a time until
reality is approached.

Atmospheric Circulation
SOUTH
POLE
Wind-Force Relations
Figtrre 5.1. Single-cell hemispheric circula-
Let us begin with a homogeneous, station- tions on a hor1togeneous, stationary earth.
ary earth receiving the sun's energy on its
spherical surface. Under these conditions,
the equatorial region would receive more the Northern Hemisphere this apparent
heat than the polar areas, and an air pres- deflection of an object moving across the
sure gradient (decrease) would be set up at face of the earth appears to be clockwise,
the earth's surface directed from the cold, or to the right of the motion, viewed down-
dense air over the pole to the warm, light stream with the motion. As viewed from
air over the equator. The resultant circu- the South Pole, the earth appears to be
lation theoretically would be a single ver- rotating clockwise, so in the Southern
tical cell between equator and pole (Figure Hemisphere the deflection appears coun-
5.1). The warm, light air at the equator terclockwise. or to the left of the motion,
would rise, and the cold, dense air at the as viewed downstream. This apparent
pole would sink. This would induce a pole- "force" is known as the Coriolis Force after
to-equator movement of air at the surface G.G. de Coriolis (1792-1843), a French
and an equator-to-pole movement of air mathematician who first treated the phe-
aloft. nomenon quantitatively.
It can be shown by such devices as
Foucault pendulums (heavy balls on long,
Coriolis Force thin wires) in museums that because of the
The earth is not just sitting in space, how- earth's rotation about its axis, any point
ever, but is rotating on an axis, and therefore on the surface of the earth acts as a center
the north-south-moving 'air streams are of rotation for its own horizon about an
flowing above a rotating plane of reference axis perpendicular to the earth's surface at
from which the motion is being judged. that point. The speed of rotation of the
An observer rotating with the earth's sur- horizon depends upon the latitude, increas-
face would perceive the air streams to curve ing from zero at the equator to a maximum
with respect to this frame of reference even at the poles. Thus, the Coriolis Force also
though they might appear to an observer increases from zero at the equator to a
in space to be straight lines (Figure 5.2). maximum at the poles. In addition, since
Since the earth rotates from west to east, the Coriolis Force is a relative motion
it is rotating counterclockwise as viewed between a moving object and the rotating
from above the North Pole. Therefore, in surface of the earth, the Coriolis Force also
42 Atmospheric Pressure and Motion i
I

increases with the speed of the moving Figure 5.3 illustrates in slow motion what
object. No matter which direction the mo- is essentially an instantaneous process of
tion takes, the Coriolis Force is directed adjustment. Assume that over a small por-
perpendicular to the motion, to the right tion of the earth's surface in the Northern
in the Northern Hemisphere and to the Hemisphere the upper air contours (lines 1i
left in the Southern Hemisphere. of equal altitude on a surface of constant
Thus there are two basic forces acting pressure) are straight and equally spaced,
upon the air, the pressure gradient force as shown in Figure 5.3. The pressure gra-
(pressure decrease from one place to an- dient force, P, is directed from high pressure '
other) and the Coriolis Force. As long as to low pressure. The air begins to move
these two forces are out of balance with down this pressure gradient, but as soon
each other, the air will change its speed as motion begins the Coriolis Force, C,
and/or direction, and by so doing quickly deflects the air to the right. AS long as the
bring into balance the two forces so that air is 'moving partially in the direction of
the air will move with a constant velocity the pressure gradient, it will accelerate, and
(speed and direction). the faster it goes, the stronger the Coriolis
Atmospheric Pressure and Motion 43

Force. Therefore, the deflection to the right dient and Coriolis Force is known as the
increases, and the Coriolis Force swings geostrophic wind. It can be computed if
around with the changing direction of the one knows the pressure gradient and the
wind, remaining perpendicular to it at all latitude. The closer together the contours
points. Ultimately, the air moves with the (the stronger the pressure gradient), the
Coriolis Force directed opposite to the pres- stronger the wind; and the lower the lat-
sure gradient. The wind then has a terminal itude, with the same pressure gradient, the
velocity fast enough to cause the magnitude stronger the wind.
of the Coriolis Force*to equal that of the Returning to the consideration of the
pressure gradient force, and from then on atmospheric motion between equator and
there is no net force. Therefore, the wind poles, because of the Coriolis Force neither
neither accelerates nor decelerates, hut the surface air, which tends to move from
moves with a constant speed and direction pole to equator nor the upper air, which
that is parallel to the contours, perpendic- tends to move from equator to pole, moves
ular to the pressure gradient. Thus, if the in a north-south direction but ends up
pressure gradient and Coriolis Force are moving in a zonal direction (parallel to the
the only two forces acting on the air, the parallels of latitude). The pole-to-equator
wind does not move from high to low movement of surface air is deflected to the
pressure but along lines of equal pressure, right in the Northern Hemisphere and the
and thereby tends to perpetuate the original left in the Southern Hemisphere. which
pressure pattern. This straight-line motion causes east-to-west winds at the surface in
of air between the balanced pressure gra- both hemispheres. The equator-to-pole-

Figure 5.2 (opposite page). The Coriolis Force. Part A illustrates that at any point on the
earth's surface an object rotates about an imaginary axis parallel to the earth's axis of
rotation. This rotation can be broken into two component parts, one that is parallel to the
earth3s surface and one that is perpendicular to it at that point. At the pole the entire
rotation is parallel to the earth's surface around a vertical axis. Here the earth's grid rotates
completely around once per day. At successively lower latitudes less and less of the rotation
is parallel to the earth's surface around a vertical axis, and more and more is perpendicular
to the earth's surface around a horizontal axis. At 30" latitude the horizontal rotation
around the vertical axis is only one-halfthat at the pole. At the equator there is no horizontal
rotation at all; an object moving across the surface would experience one complete rotation
per day in a plane perpendicular to the earth's surface and would not change its direction
with respect to the earth's grid. Part B illustrates the apparent deflection of a projectile
shot from point X on the earth's surface in the Northern Hemisphere toward a target at
point Y During the flight of the projectile this portion of the earth's surface rotates
counterclockwise around the observer at point X so that the target moves from point Y to
point Y. The projectile moves to point Y and thus misses the target. To an observer in
space it appears that the projectile moved along a straight line from X to Y , but to the
gunner at X, who is rotating with the earth, it appears that the projectile moved from X
to Y along the curved solid line. Part C shows the rotation of the position of the United
States during a nine-hour period. Assumingfrictionless airflow and constant pressuregradient,
air that initially was blowingfrom west or south at 40°N, 90"W will end up blowingfrom
northwest or southwest because of the rotation of the continent under it.
44 Atrnos~hericPressure and Motion

LOW PRESSURE
P
AP
,P
3100 m
AP
+
P
'c 7 3200 m
C
C
C
v

3300 m

HIGH PRESSURE
Figure 5.3. Frictionless airflow at 3100-3300 meters altitude quickly adjusts to the
pressure pattern, so the wind blows with constant velocity parallel to the contours
with the pressure gradient and Coriolis forces balanced against each other.

moving upper air ends up moving from dient. Thus, a balance of forces is again
ti' , west-to-east in both hemispheres. achieved, and the wind moves with constant
speed and direction, crossing the isobars
Friction at some acute angle, commonly about
15"-30" over land and less than that over
All the foregoing considerations assume
smoother water.
frictionless flow, and this is essentially true
above the influences of the earth's surface,
perhaps 300-600 meters in the air. But at
Hadley Cell
the surface of the earth, friction between Thus, the surface air, which on a differ-
the moving air and the surface below be- entially heated earth might be expected to
comes a significant force that must be taken move from the cold poles toward the hot
into consideration. This changes the wind- equator, ends up moving neither north-
force diagram to that shown in Figure 5.4. 'south nor east-west, but in some diagonal
Friction (F) always acts opposite to the direction, from east-northeast to west-
wind (W). This slows down the motion, southwest in the Northern Hemisphere.
which reduces the Coriolis Force. which There are now both zonal (latitudinal) and
allows the pressure gradient force (P) to meridional (longitudinal) components. The
overbalance the Corlolis Force (C) and pull upper air flow, which is essentially free of
the wind toward the pressure gradient. The friction, nevertheless also takes on a merid-
Coriolis Force swings with the wind, re- ional component from equator to pole in
maining perpendicular to it at all times, order to achieve mass continuity with the
and the friction swings with the wind, pole-to-equatorward component of the sur-
opposing it at all times. The motion soon face air. Although the zonal component is
adjusts to the three forces, so that the usually much larger than the meridional
resultant of the Coriolis Force and friction one, the meridional movement effects the
is equal and opposite to the pressure gra- latitudinal heat and momentum transfers
, . Atmospheric Pressure and Motion 45

SOUTHERN HEMISPHERE
W

Figure 5.4. Wind-forcediagrams of surface airflow involvingfriction. The same pressure


gradient force (P) produces different wind directions ( W ) in the two henzispheres because
of the reversal across the equator of the direction of the Coriolis Force (C).

necessary for the maintenance of the general tum of the earth's rotation away from the
circulation of the atmosphere and the heat easterly winds in low latitudes to the air
balance of the earth. This meridional com- at higher latitudes, and this transport of
ponent comprises a vertical circulation cell westerly momentum will then feed westerly
that is known as the "Hadley cell," after winds at extratropical latitudes. Friction
the Englishman George Hadley who, in the with the earth's surface would stall the
eighteenth century, postulated these move- winds whether they were all easterly or all
ments qualitatively to explain the trade westerly. There must be a balance between
winds (which will be explained in Chapter belts of alternating easterly and westerly
12). surface winds, and there must be mecha-
nisms for transferring westerly momentum
from easterly wind belts to westerly wind
Momentum
belts.
Observation has indicated, and theory has Also, a simple meridional component of
demonstrated, that a simple Hadley cell flow all the way from equator to pole in
cannot exist over an entire hemisphere. If the middle troposphere is not feasible. This
the surface winds everywhere were easterly air, rising over the equator, is essentially
(from east to west), friction between the stationary relative to the earth, and since
air and the earth's surface would soon slow the earth is rotating once a day, it has an
the winds to no wind at all. In order to average linear speed of more than 450
keep the trade winds blowing in low lati- meters per second (m/s) (1000 miles per
tudes, there must be a mechanism for trans- hour) from west to east. As the air moves
ferring the westerly (west to east) momen- poleward in essentially frictionless flow at
i i
'1
! 46 Atmospheric Pressure and Motion I
'
upper levels, it comes into latitudes with the earth's atmosphere resonates in a given
constantly decreasing radii about the earth's mode, much as a tuned instrument, that
axis of rotation. In order to maintain con- sets up circulatory systems that tend to be
stant westerly momentum, the west-east persistent in time and location. The air
velocity must increase correspondingly. By masses within circulating cells between re-
the time the air has moved half way to the sonating nodes tend to be somewhat self-
pole, at 45" latitude, the radius of rotation contained, but there are slow exchanges of
has reduced to approximately 0.7 what it flow between them, effected largely by tran-
was at the equator, and the west-east ab- sitory circulatory systems on smaller spatial
solute motion of the air must have speeded scales, that through their movements fa-
up to about 635 m/s (1400 mph). At the cilitate transfers of heat and momentum
same time, the west-east speed of the earth's necessary to keep the general circulation
surface has decreased to a ratio of 0.7 what going.
it was at the equator, and therefore the
west-east air speed relative to the earth
must be 330 m/s (737 mph)! Thus, the
Cellular Flow
great west-east momentum imparted to the Most of the time the air does not flow
air by the rotation of the earth would cause
along straight lines, but along curved lines
inconceivably high wind speeds relative to around cells and vortices. For the wind to
the earth's surface at increasing latitudes.
blow along curved isobars, another apparent
,Such flow would become extremely tur- force must be introduced. For example,
bulent and unstable, and zonal flow would suppose there is a circular cell of frictionless
break down into large whirls or eddies thatwind flow around a center of high pressure
would dissipate much of the energy. (Figure 5.5). A pressure gradient force (P)
Only at low latitudes, then, does a sem-is directed outward in all directions from
blance of a Hadley cell exist. At higher the center. Air will begin to move down
latitudes momentum considerations be- the pressure gradients from the center to-
come paramount, and the circulation of the ward the periphery of the cell. If this is
atmosphere shows little or no direct con- in the Northern Hemisphere, the Coriolis
nection with temperature patterns. The in- Force (C) will act to the right and eventually
direct "Ferrel" cell results in the middle cause the wind to flow clockwise parallel
latitudes from the transfer of westerly mo-to the isobars at that point, with C equal
mentum from lower latitudes. It is related and opposite to P. If the wind continues
only indirectly to latitudinal temperature in a constant direction, however, it will go
differences through momentum transfers off on a tangent to the circular isobars and
effected by the Hadley cell of the lower !eave the circulation system. An additional
latitudes, which is directly driven by heatforce is necessary, directed toward the cen-
differentials. ter of the high pressure cell, to cause a
continual change in direction of the wind
to keep it moving parallel to the curved
Resonance isobars. In other words, the Coriolis Force
The result is that, with the given energy must slightly overbalance the pressure gra-
inputs (latitudinal heat differentials and dient force. For this to happen, the wind
earth's rotation) and the character of the must accelerate. Therefore, the wind flow
atmosphere (mass, vertical-temperature around the curved isobars of a high pressure
structure, and hydrostatic balance between cell must be slightly stronger than the geo-
gravity and pressure decrease with height), strophic wind with the same pressure gra-
~.
Atmospheric Pressure and Motion 47

Figure 5.5. Gradient wind jlows around high and low pressure cells in the Northern
Hetn isphere.

dient along straight isobars. The additional cell, and intermediate along straight isobars.
force thus produced is known as centripetal Nonetheless, in nature the pressure gradient
force, directed toward the center of the cell. around low pressure cells is usually sig-
In the case of a low pressure cell, the nificantly greater than it is around high
pressure gradient is everywhere directed pressure cells, and it can be shown math-
from the periphery toward the center (see ematically that the pressure gradient must
Figure 5.5). The air begins to move from weaken toward the center of a high pressure
the periphery toward the center of the cell, cell so that, ultimately, the wind becomes
but in the Northern Hemisphere the Cor- essentially calm at the center of a high
iolis Force acts to the right and makes the pressure cell. In a low pressure cell, on the
wind flow counterclockwise, parallel to the other hand, the pressure gradient normally
isobars. The centripetal force is again di- increases toward the center of the cell, and
rected from the periphery toward the center, high wind speeds may be achieved.
so that in the case of a low pressure cell The balanced, frictionless flow just de-
the centripetal force and the pressure gra- scribed around curved isobars is known as
dient force oppose the Coriolis Force. the gradient wind. Like the geostrophic
Therefore, around a low pressure cell the wind, the gradient wind may be computed
Coriolis Force is less than the pressure from the pressure gradient and the latitude.
gradient force, and consequently the ve- In the Southern Hemisphere, since the Cor-
locity of the wind must be less than it is iolis Force is directed to the left of the
around the high pressure cell or even the motion, the air circulates around high and
geostrophic wind along straight isobars. low pressure cells in opposite directions to
Thus, for a given pressure gradient, the those described for the Northern Hemi-
resultant wind will be fastest around a high sphere, counterclockwise around highs and
pressure cell, slowest around a low pressure clockwise around lows.
NORTHERN HEMISPHERE

SOUTHERN HEMISPHERE
-
EITHER HEMISPHERE

- DIVERGING
,I -+ +---,
,--4
CONVERGING
\/

+-/ -+
4
,'\\.
RISING

CONVERGING
f--
I
--DIVERGING
,I\
SUBSIDING

-- +
Figure 5.6. Horizontal and vertical air flows in high and low pressure cells in the
Northern and Southern Hemispheres.
Atmospheric Pressure and Motion 49

Near the surface of the earth, friction take place in the middle of the high in
must be taken into account. This, again, order to replenish the air that is diverging
will act opposite to the motion. It will from the center at the surface. In a low
reduce the velocity of the wind, thereby the excess air at the center must rise and
reducing the Coriolis Force and allowing diverge aloft. Therefore, the horizontal mo-
the air to move gradually toward lower tion around highs and lows induces vertical
pressure. Therefore, in a high pressure cell, motion, and although the magnitude of this
the air will gradually diverge from the vertical motion generally is much less than
central point in a spiraling motion outward that of the horizontal motion, the vertical
toward the periphery in all directions. In movement is the significant component that
a low pressure cell the air will spiral inward influences development of clouds and pre-
toward the center, thereby converging on cipitation.
the center from all points around the pe- In summary, in the Northern Hemi-
riphery (Figure 5.6). sphere atmospheric motion associated with
In a high pressure cell, the constantly high pressure cells is characterized by clock-
diverging air will tend to leave a partial wise circulation, divergence, and subsi-
vacuum at the center, and in a low pressure dence. That associated with low pressure
cell the converging air will cause an excess cells is characterized by counterclockwise
of air at the center. These imbalances must circulation, convergence, and uplift. In the
be compensated for by some additional air Southern Hemisphere the circulation di-
flow, and since these circulation systems rections are reversed, but the other motions
are assumed to be at the surface of the remain the same: a high pressure cell is
earth, the only air flow that can compensate characterized by counterclockwise circu-
for deficits or excesses of air created by lation, divergence, and subsidence. while a
horizontal circulations must come from low pressure cell has clockwise circulation,
above. Therefore, in a high pressure cell a convergence, and uplift (see Figure 5.6).
constant subsiding (downward) motion must
6 OBSERVED ATMOSPHERIC AND
OCEANIC CIRCULATION PATTERNS

and the equatorial low (or doldrums). The


Surface Atmospheric Flow subtropical highs and equatorial low are
the most consistent pressure belts on earth,
Schematic so the trades are the most consistent wind
The general features of the atmospheric belts. Hence their names, which relate to
circulation near the surface are essentially the commercial activities of the early sailing
as shown in Figure 6.1. There are three vessels that made use of these reliable
pressure belts and three wind belts in each winds, particularly between Europe and
hemisphere. At or near the equator a con- the New World. Rather than set out directly
tinuous zone of low pressure relates to the west from Europe to reach America, sailors
greatest heat input over the course of the traditionally moved parallel to the west
year, with resultant high average temper- coast of Europe and North Africa until
atures and reduced atmospheric density. they reached the trade winds and then
Around 30" latitude in either hemisphere, headed west across the Atlantic. In so doing
a high pressure belt marks one of the they had to cross the subtropical high belt
resonating nodes of the atmosphere where (horse latitudes) with generally weak or
excess air circulates into the zone in the even calm surface winds, where ships often
upper troposphere and undergoes steady became becalmed for days. Here was where
subsidence (settling motion). Around 60" the ship was becalmed in "Tl7e Ritr~eo f
latitude in both hemispheres another re- the drzcietlt Mariner:"
sonating node produces low pressure, and Between the subtropical highs and the
in the polar regions, generally low tem- subpolar lows the prevailing westerlies blow
peratures tend to produce dense air and at the surface. In the Northern Hemisphere
shallow high pressure cells. these are very inconstant because of the
The surface winds flow between these great amount of land at this latitude, which
pressure zones, responding to pressure gra- causes great land-sea differences in circu-
dients between high belts and low belts but lation, and the inconstancy of the subpolar
being deflected by the earth's rotation, to lows, which generally are well formed only
the right in the Northern Hemisphere and over the northern oceans during winter.
to the left in the Southern Hemisphere. Traveling circulation systems on a smaller
The broadest and most consistent of these scale cause the surface winds to shift fre-
wind belts are the trades, from the northeast quently. In the Southern Hemisphere the
in the Northern Hemisphere and from the westerlies are more constant, since there is
southeast in the Southern Hemisphere, practically no land at this latitude and the
which blow between the subtropical highs essentially circular, high plateau-like ice
Observed Atrnospherlc and Oceanic Circulation Patterns 51

Figure 6.1. Sche~naticdiagrarn of inajor pressure and wind patterns on the sitrface of
the earth. Right-hand diagram has a cosine scale for lalittide to represent correct1.v
equi~,aleiltsurface areas on the earth. This dramatically illustrates the dominance of lhe
doldrirrns and s~ibtropicalhigh pressure belts in the global atmospheric circi~lation.And
the lefl hand diagram correctly illitstrates the great areal inflrierlce of the consequent
trade winds and intertropical convergence zone. Idealized vertical circulations, including
the Hadlej. and Ferrel cells, illustrate three cellular cir~ulatiorzsin each izernisphere. The
J S represent the siibiropical jet streams at the tropopause level. (Frorn Understanding
Our Atmospheric Environment, 2nd ed., by Neiblirger: M., Edingei; TG., and Bonner,
WD., Copvright O 1982 bv W H . Freeinan and Company. All rights reserved.)

surface of Antarctica forms a good topo- winds averaged over many years for January
graphic barrier for the air to flow around. and July, reflect the major features of the
But even here. traveling circulation systems schematic presented in Figure 6.1, plus
tend to break up thc zonal circulation to additional complications produced by land-
some extent. Poleward of the subpolar lows sea differences and seasonal changes in
the surface winds are commonly easterly, latitudinal positions and intensities. Here
but this baries a grcat deal. particularly in it can be seen that a low pressure belt in
the Northern Hemisphere where the Arctic the vicinity of the equator forms a fairly
Ocean is often not a region of consistently continuous zone of convergence between
high pressure. the trade winds on either side at all times
of the year, although it is distorted by
monsoonal flows in Africa and Asia during
Mean Observed Patterns
summer. The subtropical highs are con-
Figures 6.2 and 6.3, which show observed spicuous throughout much of the year. par-
sea-level pressures and prevailing surface ticularly in the Southern Hemisphere where
54 Observed Atmospheric and Oceanic Circulation Patterns

there is less land to break up the zone. it is limited primarily to the northern parts
They are most prevalent over the oceans of the Atlantic and Pacific oceans during
and usually are somewhat stronger and winter. Two intense lows at that time of
more extensive in area in summer than in year are centered in the vicinity of Iceland
winter. They are very well formed in the and the Aleutian Islands. They are known
Northern Hemisphere over the oceans in as the Icelandic Low and the Aleutian Low
summer where they expand and shift pole- respectively. They spawn many traveling
ward to occupy much of the areas of the low pressure cells that sweep southeastward
North Pacific and North Atlantic oceans. into Europe and North America to influ-
In winter, however, they become shrunken ence the weather over broad areas down-
and weakened in intensity as they shift stream throughout the middle latitudes of
equatorward over the Northern Hemisphere the Northern Hemisphere. During summer
oceans; and they are overshadowed by the they are weak and diffuse, although there
apparent huge, intense high pressure cell is still some semblance of the Low over
that develops over Asia, which is related Iceland and the northeastern part of the
to the coldness of the landmass at that Canadian Archipelago. As can be seen in
time of year. Both the Eurasian and North Figures 6.4 to 6.7, the postulated polar high
American landmasses tend to show pres- appears to exist over Antarctica in the
sure reversals between winter and summer Southern Hemisphere but is illusory over
because of the changing temperatures by the Arctic in the Northern Hemisphere. In
seasons, the land being colder in winter both polar areas there is a greater tendency
and warmer in summer than the adjacent for high pressure over the pole in summer
oceans. Since the Eurasian landmass is by than in winter, but a rather nondescript
far the larger one, this tendency is most pressure pattern occurs over the Arctic
pronounced 01-er Eurasia. during all seasons. Therefore, the so-called
The subtropical highs are dominant fea- polar easterlies in the Northern Hemisphere
tures in the troposphere, typically with great are not very discernable on most maps.
areal extent and great depth. The cells often The Southern Hemisphere troposphere
extend upward to the middle troposphere generally has a stronger zonal (west-east)
and beyond, because they are warm-core circulation than the Northern Hemisphere,
highs whose pressures decrease with height because the South Pole, which is more than
less rapidly than their surroundings. They three kilometers above sea level, is con-
control the wind systems over broad areas siderably colder than the North Pole, which
on either side. Circulating clockwise in the is at sea level. Thus, the surface temperature
Northern Hemisphere, they lead to the gradient, which ultimately controls the
formation of the northeasterly trades blow- strength of the atmospheric circulation in
ing toward the equator on their southern its respective hemisphere, is considerably
flanks and the prevailing southwesterly greater between the equator and the South
winds blowing toward the subpolar lows Pole than it is between the equator and
on their northern sides. In the Southern
-L
the North Pole. This probably accounts for
Hemisphere, rotating counterclockwise, they the average northward position of the in-
originate the southeasterly trades blowing tertropical convergence zone, between the
northwestward toward the equator and the trade winds, which generally lies north of
northwesterly winds blowing southeastward the geographical equator (Figures 6.8 and
toward the subpolar low. 6.9). The Southern Hemisphere circulation,
The subpolar low is well formed in the being stronger, tends to slop over the geo-
Southern Hemisphere around the fringes graphical equator so that the meteorological
of Antarctica. In the Northern Hemisphere equator, on the average, lies to the north
Observed Atmospheric and Oceanic Circulation Patterns 55

Figure 6.4. Mean sea-levelpressure in mb., Northern Hemisphere, January. (Frorn Selected
Level Heights, Temperatures, and Dew Points for the Northern Hemisphere, NAVAIR
50-1C-52.)

of the geographical equator. During the (see Figure 6.8). In South Africa it tends
Northern Hemisphere summer, when the to orient north-south through the center of
Northern Hemisphere circulation is at its the continent. Over the Atlantic and Pacific
weakest, the convergence zone is pushed oceans its position does not fluctuate as
northward beyond the Tropic of Cancer in much, but on the average the convergence
India, and in north Africa it is pushed zone lies slightly north of the equator.
northward to about 20" latitude (Figure In both hemispheres the atmospheric
6.9)., During January, on the other hand, circulation is stronger in middle latitudes
the convergence zone lies only about 8"-10" and weaker in high latitudes during winter
south of the equator in the Indian Ocean than during summer, because of seasonal
56 Observed Atmospheric and Oceanic Circulation Patterns

Figure 6.5. Mean sea-level pressure in mb., Northern Hemisphere, July. (From NAVAIR
50-1 C-52.)

differences in latitudinal distributions of


Causes of the Observed Pattern
insolation (refer back to Figure 4.3). During
summer the subtropical highs expand and Questions have naturally arisen as to why
move poleward at the expense of the west- the earth's atmosphere near the surface
erlies, while during winter the westerlies circulates with three belts of winds in each
expand their influences equatorward. The hemisphere, rather than some other num-
entire system of pressure and wind belts ber. Experiments have been conducted in
tends to shift poleward during summer and various ways (using both laboratory equip-
equatonvard during winter, but not as much ment and computer technology) to try to
as the latitudinal shifts of insolation itself. simulate the circulation of the atmosphere
Observed Atmospheric and Oceanic Circulation Patterns 57

and thereby ascertain its operative controls. patterns could be produced by varying the
One of the famous experiments of this kind speed of rotation and/or the differential
was the so-called "dishpan experiment" heating between the rim and the center of
carried out at the University of Chicago the pan. The faster the rotation or the less
by David Fultz, who poured liquid into a the heating differential, the greater the num-
dishpan-like vessel mounted on a rotating ber of circulation nodes, and the slower
platform, which he heated at the rim and the rotation or the greater the heating dif-
cooled at the center to simulate the equator ferential, the simpler the flow.
and the pole. A substance was added to Thus, it appears that the earth's atmo-
the liquid to make the circulation cells sphere circulates as it does because of the
visible. Fultz found that different nodal rate at which it rotates and the difference
58 Observed Atmospheric and Oceanic Circulation Patterns
I

Figure 6.7. Mean sea-level pressure in ~ n b . Southern


, Hemisphere, July. (From NAVAIR
50-1c-55.)

in heating between the equator and poles. in temperature belts with improved con-
These, of course, are simply astronomical ditions along the Arctic coasts of America
accidents, and if either of these inputs were and Eurasia. It might even induce desert
changed the atmosphere might circulate conditions or other detrimental effects over
quite differently. This is the primary reason large sections of the earth's surface that
why no one yet has dared to tamper with now have tolerable climates for plant growth
the Arctic ice cap. If it were melted, the and human occupancy.
temperature difference between the North
Pole and the equator would be much re-
Ocean Currents
duced, and this might change the entire
atmospheric circulation of the Northern The same planetary controls that determine
Hemisphere, or perhaps of the entire earth. the general circulation of the atmosphere
It probably would not simply cause a shift act on the water of the oceans, so it is
Observed Atmospheric and Oceanic Circulation Patterns 59

logical to assume that oceanic circulations, Undoubtedly, the climatically most sig-
at the surface at least, will mirror surface nificant ocean current on earth is the Gulf
atmospheric circulations. To a great extent Stream in the North Atlantic, which flows
this is true (Figures 6.10 and 6.11). In the northeastward between Cuba and the south-
North Pacific and North Atlantic the gen- ern tip of Florida and then parallels the
eral circulations are two large clockwise eastern coast of North America almost to
cells that correspond to the subtropical high Newfoundland. It continues as the North
pressure cells in the atmosphere above these Atlantic Drift northeastward past Britain
regions. In the S o u t h e x Hemispheric and Norway, around the northern tip of
oceans, large counterclockwise cells cor- Scandinavia, and into the Barents Sea of
respond to the subtropical highs above the Arctic north of European USSR. This
those regions. Near land masses, configu- large, warm current has a profound effect
rations of coastlines may set up localized on much of Europe since there are few
swirls tangential to the main oceanic cir- terrane barriers at these latitudes to stop
culations; in higher latitudes, particularly the westerly winds that carry the marine
around the fringes of the Arctic, currents air eastward. In the Norwegian Sea in
may be induced by rapid changes in water winter, the Gulf Stream causes surface air
temperatures. temperatures to be as much as 26°C above
Other factors enter into oceanic circu- the normal for the latitude. Much of Britain,
lations beside density differences set up by the southern parts of which lie north of
temperature differences and Coriolis Force the Canadian border, experiences winters
due to rotation of the earth. Currents may as mild as northern Florida, Georgia, and
be caused by density differences due to South Carolina, 15"-20" latitude farther
salinity differences or turbidity (sediment south.
content) differences along coasts. In addi- The counterpart to the Gulf Stream in
tion, the atmospheric flow above the ocean the North Pacific is the Japan (Kuroshio)
and the surface of the ocean itself set up Current, which branches off the North
a frictional linkage. If the atmospheric flow Equatorial Current in the southwestern part
is consistent, the water surface will take of the North Pacific near the Philippine
on a similar movement displaced somewhat Islands and moves northward past Taiwan
to the right in the Northern Hemisphere and Japan and then eastward across the
and to the left in the Southern Hemisphere. Pacific as the North Pacific Drift. The Japan
Since the subtropical high pressure cells Current does not have as profound climatic
are consistent features of the atmosphere, effects on the eastern side of the Pacific as
under these cells the water movement is the Gulf Stream does on the eastern side
most reflective of the air movement. of the Atlantic, because high mountains
Water is much denser than air and much paralleling the west coast of North America
more confined to basins, so it is not as do not allow much penetration of fresh
free to react to density differences and the Pacific marine air across the continent.
Coriolis Force as is the air. Nevertheless, Also, the North Pacific is separated from
surface waters, in particular, are free enough the Arctic during the winter by the narrow
to move so that their patterns of circulation and frozen-over Bering Straits, which block
do resemble those of the atmosphere. Deeper any movement of surface water from the
currents may be quite different from the North Pacific into the Arctic during middle
surface drifts, but they are of little climatic and late winter. This is not the case through
consequence, so this book will be concerned the broad Norwegian Sea between the North
only with the surface currents of the oceans, Atlantic and the Arctic. Therefore, the cli-
primarily as they affect the climate along matic influences of the North Pacific Drift
adjacent coasts. are not carried nearly as far poleward as
64 Observed Atmospheric and Oceanic Circulation Patterns I

are the influences of the North Atlantic consistent one is the Brazil Current, which
Drift. flows southwestward along the southeast
, , Both the North Atlantic and North Pa- coast of Brazil. But because ofthe triangular
cific warm currents have branches moving shape of eastern South America, much of I
southward along the eastern edges of their the south Equatorial Current in the Atlan- j

basins to complete the clockwise swirls of tic, which should feed the Brazil Current,
general oceanic circulations. These currents is shunted northwestward along the coast /
are cold relative to the latitudes into which of Cape Silo Roque and moves north of
they are flowing. (In all cases the desig- the equator to join the current feeding the
nations "warm" o r "cold" are relative Gulf Stream. This leaves the Brazilian Cur-
terms.) Obviously, in most cases the Cal- rent with much less flow than might be
ifornia Current, flowing southward along the case if the coastal shape of South Amer-
the west coast of California and Baja Cal- ica were different. Currents are localized
and inconstant in the Indian Ocean, where
ifornia, has warmer temperatures, partic-
ularly in winter, than does the so-called
"
warm" Alaskan Current flowing north-
they are greatly affected by the seasonal
reversal of the monsoons during the year.
i
ward into the Gulf of Alaska. But the In the South Pacific only a weak, diffuse
California Current has a cooling effect on warm current moves southwestward along
its region, while the Alaskan Current has the eastern coast of Australia.
a warming effect on its region. The coun- The two currents with by far the most i
terpart of the California Current in the pronounced climatic influences i n the
eastern North Atlantic is the Canaries Cur- Southern Hemisphere are large cold cur- 1
I
rent which flows southwestward along the rents, the largest cold currents on earth.
coasts of the Iberian Peninsula and north- The most voluminous and climatically sig-
western Africa past the Canary Islands. nificant is the Peru (Humboldt) Current
These equatorward-flowing cold currents that flows northward along the west coast
continue westward across their respective of South America from about 50"s latitude !
oceans as relatively warm equatorial cur- to almost the equator. In fact, it crosses
rents to complete the general clockwise the equator in the eastern Pacific shortly
circulation in each ocean, but these equa- after diverging from the South American
torial extensions have little climatic effect. coast near the Gulf of Guayaquil. This has
1
It is interesting to note that in the Pacific a profound effect on the climate along much
Ocean during most of the year, both the of the west coast of South America, al- i :
North Equatorial Current and the South
Equatorial Current lie to the north of the
though its influences are limited to a narrow
coastal strip because of the high Andes to
I
geographical equator, a reflection of an the east. The counterpart of the Peru Cur-
earlier statement regarding the more vig- rent in the eastern South Atlantic is the
orous atmospheric circulation of the South- Benguela Current that flows northward along
ern Hemisphere. In between the two equa- the southwest coast of Africa.
torial currents in the Pacific is an eastward All the cold oceanic currents paralleling
flowing gravity current, the so-called west coasts of continents in both hemi-
"counter current," which serves to maintain spheres are flowing in such directions that
mass continuity in the area, so the two the Coriolis Force, plus frictional drag of
equatorial currents do not pile up the water winds, tend to throw them offshore. Within
higher on the west side of the Pacific than 100-200 kilometers of the coasts vertical
0.n the east. circulations in the water are set up that
Warm. currents are poorly developed in bring cold water up from below to replace
the Southern Hemisphere. Perhaps the most the surface water that is moving away from
Observed htrnos~hericand Oceanic Circulation Patterns 65

the coasts out to sea. It is obvious that in Falkland Current flowing northward along
many cases the coldness of the surface water the Patagonian coast through much of the
in these currents is due more to upwelling year.
from below than t o horizontal movements
from higher latitudes, because cold pools
Upper Atmospheric Flow
of water are often found adjacent to land
promontories, with warmer water on either The atmospheric circulation generally in-
side. For instance, during summer the water tensifies and simplifies upward through the
off i h e coast near San Francisco is often troposphere. This is primarily due to the
the coldest along the entire North American so-called "thermal wind effect," which is
west coast. Obviously, the local factor of caused by different rates of decrease of air
upwelling in that region is more significant pressure with height because of different
than the southward horizontal movement temperatures, and hence thicknesses, of air
of water from Alaska. columns. For instance, the pressure de-
The four primary cold currents of the creases less rapidly with height over the
world-Peru, Benguela, California, a n d warm equator than over the cold pole. Even
Canaries-are positioned under the equa- if the pressures were the same at the equator
torward eastern portions of the subtropical and pole at sea level, the pressure at any
high pressure cells and further stabilize the given height over the equatorwould there-
atmosphere in those locations by cooling fore be greater than the pressure at the
from below. Combined with the heating of same height over the pole. The higher into
atmospheric subsidence from above, they the troposphere, the greater the pressure
produce an extremely intense temperature difference (Figure 6.12). Thus: the wind
inversion at or a few hundred meters above increases from zero at the surface. with
the surface. This limits upward movements equal pressures at equator and pole, to
of air to the shallow marine layer below increasingly greater speeds aloft with in-
the inversion base and induces a paradox- creasing pressure difference~.
ical climatic situation along adjacent The difference in the winds at any two
coasts-little if any measurable precipita- levels is known as the thern~alii<irln', for
tion, but consistently cool, moist surface it is dependent on the thickness of air
air with frequent fog and overcast, low columns between two pressure levels, which
I
stratus clouds. is a function of temperature. The thermal
These four cold currents and the two wind is a hypothetical flow along isotherms
large warm currents in the Northern Hemi- (lines of equal temperature) with low tem- I
sphere are the major climatically significant perature to the left in the Northern Herni- I
ocean currents, but many other currents sphere and to the right in the Southern
of more localized nature have pronounced Hemisphere. With increasing height in the
climatic effects along their immediate shores. troposphere, the thermal wind component
Examples are the cold Labrador Current eventually becomes greater than any surface
flowing southward along the coasts of Lab- influence, so that by the time the middle
rador and Newfoundland in the North At- troposphere (approximately the 500-mb.
lantic, the Kamchatka and Kuril currents pressure level, or about 5000-6000 meters
flowing southwestward along those coasts above sea level) is reached, the complex
in the western North Pacific, the Somali pattern of pressure cells and resultant winds
Current along the eastern horn of Africa, at the surface has been replaced by one
the West Australian Current flowing north- simple pressure gradient from equator to
ward along the western coast of Australia pole, with one large circumpolar whirl cir-
during much of the summer, and the cold culating from west to east, counterclockwise
P

66 Observed Atmospheric and Oceanic Circulation Patterns

900
900
+
1000 1000
Cold PRESSURE GRADIENT= 0 Warm
Figure 6.12. The thermal wind. At the surface the pressure is the same everywhere
and the wlnd is calm. As the pressure decreases more rapidly with altitude in the
cold air than in the warm air, the pressure gradient increases and the wind becomes
stronger. Arrows represent relative magnitudes of the pressure gradient at increasing
heights. The wind would blow into the paper (low pressure to the leji) in the
Northern Hemisphere and out of the paper (low pressure to the right) in the
Southern Hemisphere.

in the Northern Hemisphere and clockwise pressures are just the opposite. Cold lows
in the Southern Hemisphere (Figures 6.13 deepen aloft. slnce the pressure in the center
to 6.16). of the low decreases with height faster than
About the only surface features still ev- it does around the periphery. Warm lows,
ident at the 500-millibar level are the sub- on the other hand, fill and disappear rapidly
tropical highs, which are displaced farther aloft, as the pressure decreases with height
equatorward than they are at the surface.
These high pressure cells, being composed
less rapidly in their centers than around
their peripheries. Cold, intense lows tilt
i
of warm air, decrease in pressure only upward toward colder temperatures, gen-
gradually with height, and therefore extend erally to the northwest in North America
high into the troposphere. Since the pres- or the northeast in Eurasia.
sure decreases with height most slowly on Wind speeds also increase with height
their warmer equatorward sides, the hTghs through the troposphere, because air den- I
tilt upward toward the warm equatonvard
air. A cold high, on the other hand, such
sity decreases rapidly with height. With the
same pressure gradient, the less the mass
i
as that which forms over Asia during winter, of air, the faster it will accelerate. Also, i
is very shallow, since the pressure within drags due to surface friction and turbulence I
it decreases rapidly with height. In fact, are reduced with height, with resultant I
the high over Asia is no longer evident
even at 850 millibars, only 1300-1500 me-
increased speeds.
The trend toward faster and more sim-
I
ters above sea level (Figure 6.17). Low plified air flow aloft generally continues
I

i Observed Atmospheric and Oceanic Circulation Patterns 67

Figure 6.13. Mean 500 mb. chart, Northern Hemisphere, January. Contours are numbered
in dekameters (tens of meters). (From NAVAIR 50-IC-52.)

upward through the troposphere to the begins at lower levels at higher latitudes
tropopause, which is usually found be- than it does at lower latitudes, and even-
tween 200 millibars and 100 millibars tually a temperature reversal takes place,
(11,750-16,750 meters above sea level) dur- with warmer temperatures over high lati-
ing July over the Northern Hemisphere. tudes and colder temperatures over low
Shortly above the tropopause, the circu- latitudes. The thermal wind then changes
lation becomes confused as it adjusts to the mid-stratospheric circulation to east-
changed latitudinal temperature patterns. to-west (Figure 6.18).
Since the tropopause is reached at lower Such a reversal with height does not take
levels in higher latitudes, the temperature place during winter, when the polar area
increase with ascent in the stratosphere is constantly in the dark and little ultra-
68 Observed Atmospheric and Oceanic Circulation Patterns

Figure 6.14. Mean 500 mb. chart, Northern Hemisphere, July. Contours in dekameters.
(From NAVAIR 50-IC-52.)

i violet light is absorbed at the level of the aloft to at least the tropopause level in all
~
,
I
stratopause. The stratosphere at this time
of year remains colder at every height over
the pole than over the equator. Thus, during
seasons, dominate the circulation of the
atmosphere. It must be remembered, how-
ever, that most of the mass of the atmo-
1 winter westerly winds extend upward to sphere is at lower altitudes, and at the
the outer limit of the atmosphere over the surface of the earth easterly winds occupy
1 more area than westerly winds do. Also
entire hemisphere, except for the equatorial
region itself. remember that the earth is much larger
Figure 6.'18 may give the impression that around at the equator than at the poles
the westerlies, which expand latitudinally and that half the earth's surface lies between
Observed Atmospheric and Oceanic Circulation Patterns 69

Figure 6.15. Mean 500 mb. chart, Southern Hemisphere, January. Contours in dekameters.
(From NAVAIR 50-IC-55.)

30"N and 30"s latitude. At all times the balances the greater volume of westerlies
easterly trades span this latitudinal zone, in the middle and upper troposphere and
and many times overlap it to 35" latitude above.
or more. And although the polar easterlies Much still remains to be learned and
are very shallow, they do generally prevail explained about the circulation of the high
at the surface from the poles equatorward atmosphere. For instance, in the equatorial
to about 65" or 70" latitude. Therefore, a stratosphere there appears to be a 2.2-year
considerably greater portion of the earth's cycle of alternating layers of easterly and
surface is affected by easterly winds than westerly components, which descend
by westerly. The east-west movement of through the stratosphere at the rate of about
this denser air near the surface counter- one kilometer oer month. This 26-month
70 Observed Atmospheric and Oceanic Circulation Patterns

Figure 6.16. Mean 500 mb. chart, Southern Hemisphere, July. Contours in dekameters.
(From NAVAIR 50-IC-55.)

cycle, of course, does not correspond to ward flow in the upper troposphere. Since
any astronomical period such as the year, the troposphere is warm over the equator,
and therefore piques much curiosity. it extends to very great heights and is
Figure 6.19 attempts to demonstrate the considerably higher in the tropics than far-
vertical flow of the atmosphere at different ther poleward. In fact, the tropopause typ-
latitudes. It illustrates that between the ically is broken at two latitudes, one near
equator and 30" latitude the dominant fea- the descending poleward arm of the Hadley
ture in the troposphere is a Hadley cell cell and the other in the subpolar zones
with rising air currents over the equator around 60" latitude.
and descending air currents in subtropical The mid-latitude circulation is more
zones. These vertical movements initiate complicated, being characterized by trav-
equatorward flow at the surface and pole- eling waves and vortices that ultimately
Observed Atmospheric and Oceanic Circulation Patterns 71

Figure 6.17. Mean 850 mb. chart, Northern Hemisphere, January. Contours in dekameters.
(From NAVAIR 50-IC-52.)

transport heat and westerly momentum warm moist air from lower latitudes and
from the poleward edges of the Hadley cells a subsiding of polar air from higher lati-
to drive the westerly Ferrel cells of the tudes along a baroclinic zone that slopes
middle latitudes. In the vertical, there is equatorward from the top of the tropo-
no complete circulation; westerly winds sphere to the earth's surface.* (This so-
generally prevail at all altitudes throughout called polar,fiont will be discussed in detail
the troposphere. But averaged over time, in Chapters 9 and 10.) North of 60" latitude
there is a gradual movement upward of there is little vertical movement in the

~ ~

*An unstable zone in which air pressure surfaces do not coincide with air density surfaces.
72. Observed Atmospheric and Oceanic Circulation Patterns

N. POLE

S. POLE
r ;j:
Figure 6.18. Mean zonal (west-east component) winds around the earth, by latitude and
altitude. Isotachs (lines o f equal air speedj are labeled in meters per second. (~.fierY
Mintz, "The Observed Zonal Circulation of the Atmosphere," Bulletin. American Me-
teorological Society [1954]:209.

troposphere. The air there is dominated by streams. Accordingto the World Meteo-
horizontal mixing that generally is not as rological Organization, any speed exceeding
vigorous as in the middle latitudes. 30 meters per second (67 mph or 108 kilo-
meters per hour) may be called a jet stream.
Jet Streams Speeds vary along the axis of a jet stream,
particularly along the polar front jet.
At the subtropical and subpolar breaks in Strongest jet streams have been recorded
the tropopause, large horizontal tempera- during winter over southern Japan, where
ture gradients set up high-speed flows of speeds up to 140 meters per second (500
air that have become known as the let kilometers per hour. or 310 m~h-270 knots)
i Observed Atmospheric and Oceanic Circulation Patterns 73
I

LATITUDE

Figure 6.19. Schematic representation of the meridionic circulation and associated jet
cores. (Afer E. Palm&n, "The Role ofAtmosphel.ic Disturbances in the General Circulation,
"Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society, Vol. 77 [1951], pp. 337-54.)

have been observed. Secondary maxima on daily maps during winter, most of the
generally occur off the east coast of North time the two jets are discernible, and the
America and in the central part of North highest wind speeds are usually encoun-
Africa (Figure 6.20). Along the edges of jet tered at higher latitudes, averaging about
streams, wind sheers produce sharp tur- 50"N (Figure 6.21). During summer in the
bulence as small vortices form between the Northern Hemisphere, the subtropical jet
fast moving air streams and the more slow- tends to disappear, and the average position
moving air around them. This accounts for of jet streams in the Northern Heinisphere
the rough air encountered by aircraft upon shifts poleward (Figure 6.22).
entering or leaving jet streams. Although observations are scarce in the
Two jet streams, the subtropical jet and Southern Hemisphere, the jet streams there
the polar front jet, are typical during winter appear to be similar to those in the north,
in the ~ o r t h e r n " ~ e m i s ~ h eThe
r e . subtrop- with perhaps less fluctuation in position
ical jet is located, on the average, at about and intensity than in the north because of
28"N latitude at about the 200-millibar smaller land masses in the Southern Hemi-
level, between the tropical tropopause (at sphere. The strongest westerly winds are
approximately 100 mb) and the mid-lati- found south of Africa and over the Indian
tude tropopause (at approxin~ately250 mb). Ocean. During winter a separate belt of I
The polar front jet lies near the 300-millibar subtropical jets is found near 3 0 3 , which
level between the mid-latitude tropopause is most pronounced over eastern Australia.
and the polar tropopause. The polar front This subtropical jet apparently disappears
jet meanders and shifts its position much during the Southern Hemisphere summer.
more than the subtropical jet; so that, while All jet streams tend to be weaker in summer
it is usually the stronger of the two, it tends than in winter, as is the entire circulation
to become obscured when averaged with of the troposphere, since the latitudinal
all jet stream occurrences over the period temperature gradient is reduced between
of a month or more. Thus, most represen- equator and pole during summer.
tations of ?he average position of the win-
tertime jet in the Northern Hemisphere
Standing Waves
approximate the position of the subtropical
jet centered over the subtropical high pres- The circumpolar west-to-east circulation of
sure zone at the surface (Figure 6.20). But the middle and upper troposphere is not
74 Observed Atmospheric and Oceanic Circulation Patterns

Figure 6.20. Average positions and strengths of jet streams in the Northern Hemisphere,
January. (After Namias and Clapp.)

exactly circular, but meanders through magnitudes until they become so elongated
equatorward-extending troughs and pole- that they become cut OK Then isolated
ward-extending ridges, some of which are pools of cold air remain for a while in
quasi-stationary in space over protracted lower latitudes, and warm pools remain in
periods of time. These are the so-called higher latitudes, while the west-east flow
standing waves of the upper troposphere reestablishes itself with only minor un-
or the "Rossby waves," named after Carl dulations to begin the sequence all over
Rossby who, in 1938, first described them again (Figure 6.23).
adequately and dealt with them quantita- As can be seen on Figure 6.13, the
tively. These waves are most pronounced January average flow shows two very pro-
in winter. They generally undergo sequences nounced troughs, one over the eastern Ca-
of events that increase their meridional nadian Archipelago and another across east-
Observed Atmospheric and Oceanic Circulation Patterns 75

,
Figure 6.21. 300 mb. chart, 6 February 1981. Isotachs (lines of equal air speed) are
black lines numbered in knots ( l . U statute mph). Regions with air speeds greater than I
70 knots are shaded. Gray lines are contours in dekameters. Segments of both the polar
and tropical jets are discernible particularly over the central Pacific and northwestern
Canada, the northern and central Atlantic, and northern Europe and north Africa.

ern Siberia to the Sea of Okhotsk, and a Asia, particularly northward in Siberia. In
lesser trough through eastern Europe. Rel- the upper reaches of the troposphere the
atively pronounced ridges appear over the jet streams follow these sinuous routes of
eastern North Pacific, extending northward the standing waves around the hemisphere.
into the Bering Strait. and over the eastern As with the jet streams, monthly averages
North Atlantic; culminating over central tend to obscure some features that are
Greenland, while a very weak, broad ridge apparent on daily maps. While mean
extends over much of the central part of monthly 500-millibar maps show an average
76 Observed Atmospheric and Oceanic Circulation Patterns

Figure 6.22. Average positions and strengths of jet streams in the Northern Hemisphere,
July. (After Namias and Clapp.)

of three standing waves around the North- differences between sea and land. Perhaps
ern Hemisphere, most daily maps show the greatest influence on the Northern
five, some less, some more. The 500-mil- Hemisphere flow is the Rocky Mountains
libar map for 12 April 1983Lillustrates a in western North America, which lie es-
rather extreme case of eight fairly distin- sentially perpendicular to the zonal flow
guishable troughs around 50"N latitude, a n d probably cause the deep average
plus some short waves in between (Figure monthly trough over eastern North Amer-
6.24). ica. The weak average trough over eastern
The origin of these standing waves is Europe may be simply a resonance wave,
undoubtedly tied to topography and heat a downstream ripple of the anchor wave
sources and sinks, such as the thermal over eastern North America. But the tem-
Observed Atmospheric and Oceanic Circulation Patterns 77

WARM AIR

Figure 6.23. Schematic representation of a wave sequence (index cycle) in the uppet
troposphere.

perature differences between sea surfaces simplicity may be partially due to lack of
and land surfaces in coastal regions may data in the Southern Hemisphere. Plots of
be just as important as topographic bar- balloon paths indicate the presence of five
riers. For instance, whenever sea surface waves in the Southern Hemisphere, similar
temperatures are high in the eastern Pacific, to the daily situation in the Northern Hemi-
a pronounced ridge forms in the upper sphere (Figures 6.25).
troposphere over the eastern Pacific and The standing waves of the middle and
western North America, which has pro- upper troposphere remain quasi-stationary,
, found effects on the weather downstream while shorter waves and vortices below
across most of North America. move along their contours. It may take
In the Southern Hemisphere, probably weeks or even months for the long waves
the greatest influence is the Andes mountain to shift their positions significantly, and
chain in western South America. None- thus they become conservative factors in
theless, since there is much less land in the atmospheric flow and allow for some
the higher middle latitudes in the Southern extended forecasts that could not be pre-
Hemisphere, the air flow there seems to be dicted from the rapidly fluctuating flow
much more zonal (west-east). T h ~ apparent
s patterns of the surface air. Although the
78 Observed Atmospheric and Oceanic Circulation Patterns

Figure 6.24. 500 mb. chart for 12 April 1983. Contours in dekameters.

standing waves of the upper troposphere sitions either downstream, with the wind,
tend to remain in semiconstant forms over or upstream, against the wind. The direc-
prolonged periods of time, they sometimes tion of motion largely relates to the length
undergo rapid transitions into different for- of th wave-the longer waves tending to
mations, which then bring about abrupt f:
regress upstream, while the s h k e r waves
shifts in general weather conditions over move downstream. Usually, shorter waves
broad sections of the earth's surface. A move faster than long waves.
region that might have experienced a pro-
longed rainy spell of several weeks' duration
may next find itself in a prolonged spell Vorticity
of droughty conditions. Or a similar con- The meandering of the upper air streams
trast of temperatures might take place. The is a natural phenomenon that relates to the
standing waves can slowly shift their po- spin' of air particles across the face'of the
Observed Atmospheric and Oceanic Circulation Patterns 79

Figure 6.25. Path and daily positions of a constant-level balloon launched from Christ-
church, New Zealand, 30 March 1966. The balloon drifted for 33 days at an altitude
of about 12 kilometers, during which it circled the Southern Hemisphere three times.
(From National Center for Atmospheric Research.)

earth. The amount of spin per unit area fined as decreasing cyclonic flow or in-
is known as vorticitj~.This has two com- creasing anticyclonic flow (clockwise in the
ponents, one relating to the Coriolis Force, Northern Hemisphere and counterclock-
which increases with latitude, and one re- wise in the Southern Hemisphere). If an
lating to the curvature of the flow itself, air stream is moving with some meridional
known as relative vorticitv. Positive relative component, say from southwest to northeast
corticity is defined as increasing cyclonic in the Northern Hemisphere, it will be
flow (counterclockwise in the Northern moving into higher latitudes, which will
Hemisphere and clockwise in the Southern increase the Coriolis Force, which increases
Hemisphere), and negative vorticitj) is de- that component of vorticity. For the ab-
80 Observed Atmospheric and Oceanic Circulation Patterns 1
.
SPEED
MAXIMUM

SPEED
MINIMUM

Figure 6.26. Schematic representation of changing Coriolis Force and relative vorticity
in flow along a standing wave.

solute vorticity (the total of the two com-


ponents) to remain constant, the relative
vorticity due to curvature must decrease.
they aid in predicting the development of
such features; i.e., whether they are going
to strengthen or weaken. Since for a given
1 i1
;
I
I

I
Thus, the northeasterly moving flow must pressure gradient the wind moves faster in !
become more anticyclonic, or curve east- anticyclonic flow (around a high pressure j
ward and ultimately southeastward (Figure ridge) than in cyclonic flow (around a low
6.26). As the flow starts to move southward pressure trough), the air, in flowing along
again, the vorticity component due to the a meandering wave pattern, will be con- !
. ,
Coriolis Force begins to decrease, and there- stantly changing its wind speed. This will
fore the relative vorticity due to curvature produce speed convergences and diver-
must increase once more, thus turning the gences in the flow that will induce vertical
flow in a cyclonic (counterclockwise) di- motion in the air.
rection, which ultimately sends the air back For instance, in Figure 6.26, the air
to the northeast again. Thus, the air moves moving from southwest to northeast and
I
downstream in a wavy pattern with the undergoing increasing anticyclonic curva-
relative vorticity constantly adjusting to ture will tend to speed up, while the air
the changing latitude, and the meandering moving from northwest to southeast and
flow tends to perpetuate itself. coming into influences of increased cyclonic
curvature will tend to slow down. There-
~
,
:
,

fore, the air will experience a divergence


Divergence and Convergence or pulling- apart in the horizontal plane in
.
~he'standin~ waves of the upper tropo- the southwest-to-northeast portion of the
sphere are important not only for steering, wave, and a piling up or convergence in
and thus predicting, the future motion of the northwest-to-southeast portion of the
storms and other more localized features wave.
in the lower troposphere, but also because The air deficit in the region of divergence
Observed Atmospheric and Oceanic Circulation Patterns 81

Speed Divergence Speed Convergence


Figure 6.27. Speed divergence and convergence induced by latitudinal changes in Coriolis
Force with north-south flow in afield of constant pressure gradient, Northern Hemisphere.

will have to be compensated for by vertical weather conditions in opposite portions of


motion. And since this is in the middle standing waves tend to be opposite in
troposphere, air can move into the layer character: increasing storminess. cloudi-
from both above and below. Since most of ness, and precipitation in southwest-north-
the storm development and cloud formation east-oriented eastern branches of troughs
is below this level, the important movement or western branches of ridges, and clearer,
is the vertical motion rising from below. drier weather in northwest-southeast-ori-
This will tend to strengthen storm devel- ented western branches of troughs or east-
opment, which will induce cloud formation ern branches of ridges in the Northern
and possible precipitation. (These processes Hemisphere. Since the standing waves do
will be discussed more fully after the topic shift slowly with time, over distances of
of moisture has been treated.) The portion several hundred or even several thousand
of the wave that is experiencing convergence kilometers, an area might experience a pro-
will have an excess of air that must move longed period of clouds and rain as the
vertically downward below and upward wave occupies one position, and then ex-
above. Again, it is the downward motion perience a pro16nged period of drought as
below that becomes important to the con- the wave shifts to another position.
sideration of weather conditions, and this Since essentially opposite types of
subsiding air would weaken any storm mov- weather can be expected simultaneously in
ing along this poriton of the track and tend places about one-half wavelength apart, the
to produce clearing skies and fair weather. Soviets, with their large west-east territory,
Thus, other things being equal, the made use of this knowledge during the
82 Observed Atmospheric and Oceanic Circulation Patterns

1950s to develop the so-called "Virgin sure gradient force. As the air moves into
Lands" east of the Urals, which are es- lower and lower latitudes, the Coriolis Force
sentially one-half wavelength away from tends to decrease because of the decreasing
the older farming regions in the Ukraine. latitude, and this allows the wind to be
These two areas, which are both droughty, pulled partially toward the pressure gra-
seldom experience extreme drought simul- dient. If the air motion has a component
taneously. When it is exceptionally dry in directed down the pressure gradient, it will
the Ukraine, it is usually exceptionally moist accelerate. This will increase the speed of
east of the UraIs in western Siberia and the wind, which will increase the Coriolis
northern Kazakhstan, and vice versa. By Force, which will pull the wind back to
planting both areas with similar crops, the the original direction, and again the Cor-
Soviets can assure themselves of a fairly iolis Force will balance the pressure gradient
stable year-to-year overall production. force. The net result is an increase in wind
Since cyclones tend to intensify on pole- speed but no change in direction. Hence,
ward-moving limbs of waves, and since low in an equatorward-flowing air stream, hor-
pressures tilt toward colder temperatures, izontal divergence will occur that will in-
the traveling low pressure vortices of the duce vertical motion toward that air stream.
middle latitudes eventually end up moving If the air is at the ground and this is a
poleward and ultimately merge in the gen- surface wind, the only direction the air can
eral region of the subpolar lows to cause come from is above, and therefore the
constant regeneration of those systems. horizontal divergence induces subsidence
Conversely, anticyclones intensify on equa- which causes con~pression,heating, and fair
torward-moving limbs of waves and tilt weather. Conversely, air moving from equa-
toward warmer temperatures, so high pres- tor to pole along straight, equally spaced
sure cells ultimately move equatonvard to isobars will constantly slow down, and air
merge with the subtropical high pressure from behind will tend to pile up on air in
belts and constantly regenerate those sys- front, which produces horizontal conver-
tems. gence, which at the surface would produce
Horizontal convergence or divergence can uplift (right-hand diagram).
be produced either by directional move- It is interesting to note that with the
ments that come together or spread apart same pressure gradient, the wind will have
(see Figures 6.8 and 6.9) or by speed vari- a higher velocity at low latitudes than at
ations within flows, either of which can be high latitudes. At low latitudes, because of
achieved in either straight-line flow or cur- reduced Coriolis Force, the wind must reach
vilinear flow. Often the speed variations higher speed in order for the Coriolis Force
,within an air stream are brought about by to be large enough to balance the pressure
changing Coriolis Force with changing lat- gradient force. In reality, however, pressure
itude. For instance, assume straight north- gradients usually afe not constant over ex-
south-oriented isobars in the Northern tended latitudinal distances, but diminish
Hemisphere, as shown in Figure 6.27. In toward lower latitudes, so that in most
the left-hand diagram the pressure gradient cases the winds are quite weak in low
force (P) is directed toward the east and latitudes and there are few isobars on pres-
is constant all along the isobars, since they sure maps in equatorial regions. Since the
remain equally spaced. .Assuming friction- Coriolis Force reduces to zero at the equa-
less flow, the wind will flow from north to tor, the concept of geostrophic wind '6reaks
south with the Coriolis Force (C) directed down in equatorial areas.
westward equal in magnitude to the pres- In the middle troposphere, as stated a
Observed Atmospheric and Oceanic Circulation Patterns 83

few paragraphs back, the same convergence the left-front quadrant of a jet core, followed
and divergence would produce subsidence by the right-rear quadrant. Thus, most uplift,
and uplift respective of the air below the and hence cloud formation and precipita-
air stream. At the top of the troposphere, tion, will occur to the right of the axis
if segments ofjet streams are resent, strong where air enters a jet core and to the left
?
divergence is most frequen ly observed in of the axis where air leaves a jet core.
7 1 ATMOSPHERIC MOISTURE

Moisture is the third basic ingredient, along initially in the frozen state, it would take
with heat and motion, that determines the 80 calories per gram to melt the ice into
weather over the earth. It not only supplies water at 0°C. Therefore, it can be seen that
the water for cloud formation and precip- it requires almost as much heat to melt
itation, but also, through changes of state, ice as it does to raise the temperature of
is intimately involved with great quantities water from freezing to boiling, and it re-
of energ) in the form of latent heat. All quires 5.4 times as much heat to evaporate
the moisture in the atmosphere is derived water at the boiling point as it does to
from the earth's surface through the process raise its temperature from freezing to boil-
of evaporation. A great deal of heat is ing (Figure 7.1).
required to change the state of water from Thus, evaporation and condensation in-
liquid to gas. This is known as lateizt volve truly great quantities of heat. Under
(hidden) heat because it does not effect a natural conditions evaporation usually takes
change in temperature. This heat is not lost place much below the boiling point ofwater.
forever. but is released again once the water This requires more heat. At P C , the latent
changes back from gas to liquid. The latent heat of evaporation is 596 calories per gram.
heat released may then be utilized to effect Sometimes there is a direct change from
a temperature change in the air, or for some solid to gas, as in the case of evaporation
other purpose. Also. latent heat is involved of snow. This is known as sl~l1li1~zatiot7.The
in the change of state from solid to liquid latent heat of sublimation is the sum of
and vice versa. the latent heat of fusion (or melting) and
the latent heat of evaporation (or conden-
sation), or a total of 676 calories per gram
Latent Heat if the sublimation takes d a c e at 0°C. If ice
To envision the quantity of heat involved at 0°C is melted and then the liquid water
in the change of state of water, recall that is heated to the boiling point and evapo-
the heat unit, the calorie, is defined as the rated, the total amount of heat necessary
heat that is required to raise the temper- would amount to 80 + +
100 540 = 720
ature of 1 gram of water 1°C. To raise the cahries.
temperature of 1 gram of liquid water from 7

the freezing point, P C , to the boiling point,


100°C. would require 100 calories of heat.
Water Vapor
But to change that 1 gram of water at the The water vapor in the atmosphere can be
boiling point to water vapor at the boiling expressed in a variety of ways. All are
point would require 540 calories of heat. significant, since some serve some purposes
Also, if water at the freezing point were and others serve other purposes. Absol~lte
Atmospheric Moisture 85

hur7ziciit.v is defined as mass of water vapor Vapor 100'C

per volume of air. This is not a conservative


number, since as the air moves about it
expands and contracts. Thus, tke absolute
humidity can change drastically without
any addition or subtraction of moisture.
A more conservative measure is specijc
htlmidity, which is defined as the mass o f
water vapor per mass of air. A closely 1 540 calories
related value is the rnisirzg ratio, which is
the mass of the water vapor compared to
the mass of the dry air. Since air is always
much more abundant than water vapor,
there is little difference between specijc
hllriiiditj~(which is the mass of water vapor
divided by the total mass of the air in-
cluding the water vapor) and the mixing
ratio (the ratio of the water vapor to the
100 cal
dry air). These values are quite useful in
technical work, such as weather forecasting.
as they are measures of such things as
Water
4ODC

latent heat energy available in the air due Ice iO'C


to its water vapor content. availability of
Figure 7.1. Heat requirements to
precipitable water, atmospheric stability change the state of water.
characteristics, and so forth.
To the layman, however. the fact that
the air at a given time might contain 10 (Figure 7.2). Thus. a specific change in
grams of water vapor per kilogram of dry temperature will effect a greater change in
air probably holds little meaning. More saturation mixing ratio at higher temper-
meaningful might be the degree of satu- atures than at lower temperatures. This fact
ration of the air, which noticeably affects will become very important when stability
the physiological workings of the human characteristics of the air are considered in
body and all other living organisms, as the next chapter.
well as cloud formation, precipitation pro- Relative humidity can be changed either
cesses, and so forth. This expression, known by adding moisture to or subtracting mois-
as relatire /z~rr~7idity, is the ratio of the ture from the air. or by changing the air
actual humidity of the air compared to the temperature. Temperature changes nor-
saturation humidity of the air, both ex- mally take place more quickly than mois-
pressed in the same units. Thus, if the ture changes, and so short-term relative
water vapor content of the air has been humidity changes are usually related pri-
measured to be 7 grams of water vapor marily to temperature changes. For in-
per kilogram of dry air, and the saturation stance, relative humidity is usually rather
mixing ratio of the air is known to be 10 high early in the morning when the tem-
grams per kilogram, the relative humidity perature is near its minimum point, but
is 70 percent. drops as the air heats up during the morn-
The saturation mixing ratio of the air ing. Thus, in Figure 7.2, if the air on a
depends on temperature; it increases at an given morning is saturated at 10°C and
increasing rate with increasing temperature warms up during the morning to 20°C
86 Atmospheric Moisture

without any addition or subtraction of across the warmer water surface, moisture
moisture, its relative humidity would have will be injected upward into the cold air
dropped to little more than 50 percent. and will probably supersaturate the cold
Conversely, the relative humidity tends to air, which will cause recondensation that
increase during the night as the temperature produces what is known as steam fog.
decreases. The evaporation rate from a given sur-
If the air contains much water vapor face depends upon the vapor pressure dif-
and the night is clear and still so that much ference between the evaporating surface and
heat is radiated outward from the earth's the medium into which the moisture is
surface, the temperature drop may be enough moving. Vapor pressure difference also ac-
to reduce- the capacity of the air to the counts for moisture movement from small
point where it can barely hold all the water droplets to large water droplets and
moisture that it has in it. The air then from a water surface to an ice surface at
becomes saturated, and if cooling continues, the same temperature, since the vapor pres-
some of the moisture must be condensed sure at the surface of a water droplet is
into liquid droplets and may settle on sur- inversely proportional to the radius of the
face features in the form of dew. Thus, the droplet, and it is greater over a water surface
temperature at which the air becomes sat- than over an ice surface at the same tem-
urated is referred to as the deiv point, which perature. These facts will be taken up again
is another measure of the amount of mois- in Chapter 13 in a discussion of cloud
ture in the air. Although the dew point is formation and precipitation. At the same
expressed as a temperature. it is a measure time it will be stressed that the air not
of the actual amount of moisture in the only contains water vapor but also water
air. This is the expression commonly used in liquid and solid states in droplets that
in weather reports. With the temperature are small enough to be suspended in the
it gives a rough indication of the degree air by the motion of the air. These liquid
of saturation of the air and the temperature and solid droplets are visible in clouds and
at which the air will become saturated if fog; water vapor cannot be seen. Thus,
cooling takes place. most of the time not only an exchange of
For certain purposes it becomes most moisture is taking place at the atmosphere-
useful to express the water vapor content earth interface but also changes of state of
of the air in terms of the pressure it exerts. moisture from solid to liquid to gas, and
Since the air is simply a mixture of gases, vice versa, are constantly taking place within
its total pressure can be divided into its the atmosphere. Water is unique among the
component parts: that due to nitrogen, that atmospheric gases in that it occurs in all
due to oxygen, and so forth, and that due three states within the normal range of
to water vapor. It is the i,apor pressure that temperature within the atmosphere.
determines the movement of moisture across Since all moisture is derived from the
an interface, such as a water surface in earth's surface through the process of evap-
contact with air Qove it. If the vapor oration, the moisture content of the air is
pressiire of the water surface is greater than much greater in the lower troposphere than
the saturation vapor pressure of the air at higher altitudes. Little is found above
above it, moisture will move upward from the tropopause, since vertical mixing is
the water surface into the air, whether the. generally limited above that level. Within
air is saturated or not. This phenomenon the troposphere may be found distinct lay-
is often observed over relatively warm water ers, produced by movements of air, some
bodies, such as lakes and rivers, early in being relatively dry and others containing
winter before thcy freeze. If cold air moves much moisture.
Atmospheric Moisture 87

Figure 7.2. The saturation mixing ratio increases at an increasing rate with increasing
ternperaflcre.

Geographical Distribution of plants can exceed evaporation over adjacent


Evaporation and Atmospheric oceans, since the tree leaves present more
total evaporating surface to the air than
Humidity the ocean surface does. These are the ex-
The amount of evaporation that takes place ceptions rather than the rule, however. Such
over a surface depends upon the availability forested areas exist in equatorial regions
of moisture at the surface and the vapor with great amounts of cloudiness and high
pressure gradient between the surface and atmospheric humidity. which tend to reduce
the air above it. Since plenty of moisture vapor pressure gradients, and hence evap-
is always available at the surface of the oration. Among the ocean areas, the sub-
oceans, in general there is more evaporation tropical oceans overlain by the subtropical
over the oceans than over the continents atmospheric high pressure cells experience
at similar latitudes (see Figure 4.8). In a the greatest evaporation, since the air there
few land areas, particularly those covered is generally clear and dry. Intense heating
by lush tropical rainforests, evaporation from the sun coupled with continual re-
plus the transpiration of moisture through plenishment of fresh, dry air through sub-
90 Atmospheric Moisture

Since the water vapor, once in the air,


moves with the wind, its flux can be de-
duced crudely from annual wind direction
and speed patterns relative to the major
evaporation areas. Unlike the heat flux of
the atmosphere, which moves simply from
low latitudes to high latitudes with max-
imum values in the middle latitudes, the
moisture flux has a more complex pattern,
because the greatest amounts ofwater vapor
LATITUDE are gained not at the equator but in the
Figure 7.5. Mean latitudina( distributions of subtropics on either side. From these areas
atmospheric vapor pressure and relative hu- moisture moves both equatorward with the
midity. (Froin Howard J. Critchfield, GEN- trade winds and poleward with the west-
ERAL CLIMATOLOGY, 4th ed., O 1983,
p. 45. Reprinted by permission of Prentice- erlies, reaching maximum flux around 10"
Hall, Inc., Engleit~ood Cliffs, N.J.) and 40" latitude in each hemisphere, similar
to the flux of latent heat shown in Figure
sidence from above produce low vapor pres- 4.11.
sure in the surface air relative t o the The major part of the moisture flux in
underlying sea surface. the atmosphere converges on the equatorial
Nevertheless, the largest amount of evap- zone, so that on the average the specific
oration on earth occurs at a somewhat humidity is highest at the equator and drops
higher latitude. off the east coast of North off steadily toward the poles, where the air
America between North Carolina and New is too cold to hold much n~oisture.The
Jersey. .A similar situation occurs off the latitudinal distribution of relative humidity
southeast coast of Japan, but it is not quite is quite different, however. since it depends
as pronounced. The high annual values in not only on moisture content. but also on
these areas are accounted for entirely by moisture-holding capacity. The lesser
winter conditions. As can be seen in Figure amount of specific humidity at high lati-
7.3, these areas are very conspicuous in tudes is still suffic~entto bring the air near
January. but in July they do not appear at saturation in cool temperatures that reduce
all (Figure 7.4). During winter, the vapor the capacity there to hold moisture. There-
pressure difference between the water sur- fore, average relative humidity is high both
face and the air above is maintained high, in the equatorial region and in the polar
because the warm ocean currents flowing regions (Figure 7.5). It is lowest precisely
north-northeastward along these coasts are in the subtropical regions of greatest evap-
in stark contrast to fresh; cold, polar air oration, since moisture is moved outward
that much of the time blows off the con- in both directions from these zones by the
tinents across the water currents. Since the winds, and temperatures are generally high.
Gulf Stream has a much closer contact with Figure 7.6 shows the world distribution
the mainland coast of North America than of average relative humidity in July. Here
the Japan Current does with the mainland it can be seen that the subtropical high
of Asia, the contrast is greater in the North pressure zones stand out as belts of low
American area, and hence the evaporation relative humidity, while the equatorial zone
is greater. During summer when the air between them, as well as parts of the middle
has about the same temperature as the and higher latitudes, mainly over the oceans,
water, or is even warmer, the evaporation show higher relative humidities. The mon-
is not outstanding in these areas. soon region of southeast Asia shows par-
94 Atmospheric Moisture

!
ticularly high relative humidities at this with seasons, generally has greatest amounts
time of year. In general, the interiors of of atmospheric moisture, and amounts de-
middle-latitude landmasses, particularly in crease poleward, with lowest amounts in !
western North America and central Asia, the winter hemisphere. Areas with consis-
are occupied by air with low relative hu- tently converging air streams crossing warm
midities comparable to those in the sub- ocean surfaces show particularly high val-
tropical deserts of the Sahara and Australia. ues, such as northeast India during August.
Maps of precipitable water (Figures 7.7 The Consequences of these various dis-
and 7.8) indicate the actual amount of tributions of atmospheric humidity will i
moisture in the air in terms of amounts
of precipitation that would fall if all the
moisture in the air were precipitated. Here
become evident in subsequent chapters
when atmospheric stability, storm devel-
opment, clouds, and precipitation are dis-
i
I
it can be seen that the intertropical con- cussed. 1
vergence zone, which shifts latitudinally
8 ADIABATIC PROCESSES AND
ATMOSPHERIC STABILITY

It has already been stated that temperature proximately 10°C per kilometer (5.5"F per
normally decreases with height at a fairly thousand feet). This is assuming the air is
consistent rate throughout the troposphere. not saturated and no latent heat is being
On the average this amounts to about 6.5"C released by the process of condensation.
per kilometer (3.5"F per thousand feet). This is known as the dry adiabatic lapse
One might question how such a situation rate. Since this rate is greater than the
can occur, with warm air below and cold average, or environmental, lapse rate men-
air above. Since warm air is lighter than tioned before, it can be seen that under
cold air it would seem logical that the normal conditions the temperature of a
warm air would tend to rise and the cold rising parcel of air will decrease more rap-
air to sink, thereby bringing about a stable idly than the temperature of the air around
situation that would resist motion. The it. So the rising parcel everywhere is colder
answer lies in the vertical decrease in at- than its environment, hence more dense,
mospheric pressure with height and the and tends to settle back down to the level
increase in potential energy of position from which it came. Thus, the average lapse
above the earth's surface. rate is a stable condition in spite of the
As the warm air rises, it comes under fact that the temperature decreases with
constantly decreasing atmospheric pressure, altitude.
which allows it to expand. The work ex- Temperature changes in the free atmo-
pended by the rising air to expand its sphere over short periods of time are es-
volume and increase its potential energy sentially adiabatic. Since air is a poor con-
above the earth's surface requires energy, ductor of heat, each air parcel tends to
which must be derived from some source. retain its own thermal identity. Therefore
This comes from the internal energy (mo- any parcel of air that is moving vertically
lecular activity) of the air itself, which can be expected to change its temperature
reduces the molecular motion of the rising at the adiabatic rate, decreasing 10°C per
air, and hence, by definition, its temper- kilometer as it rises, or increasing 10°C per
ature. This change of temperature without kilometer as it descends.
addition or subtraction of heat energy from Over the long run this is not so true,
external sources is known as an adiabatic and some heat energy is exchanged from
process. one parcel of air to another. Thus the
It can be demonstrated mathematically average condition is not adiabatic. Nor-
that the temperature of vertically moving mally, temperature decreases upward
air changes at the constant rate of ap- through the atmosphere at a rate of about
96 Adiabatic Processes and Atmospheric Stability

6.5"C per kilometer, and the atmosphere and is usually marked by the bases of cloud
will probably not be experiencing much formations. Above this level latent heat of
vertical motion. This is the lapse rate that condensation will be released that will slow
is used to change recorded temperatures down the cooling caused by the lift and
to equivalent sea level temperatures when expansion of the air. Then the air cools at
constructing temperature charts for the the wet (pseudo) adiabatic lapse rate. This
world. The differences in elevation of land is not a constant rate, since the amount of
surfaces are reconciled by adding 6.5"C for moisture condensed, and hence latent heat
every kilometer (3.5"F for every 1000 feet) released, depends on the temperature of
above sea level. Thus, if a station at 2 the air at which the process takes place.
kilometers elevation records a temperature In the lower troposphere there is usually
of 1O0C,the temperature would be recorded enough water vapor in the air to release a
on a sea-level equivalent map as significant amount of latent heat when con-
densation is caused by rising air. But higher
in the troposphere, the amount of water
However, if an air parcel with an initial vapor in the air is so small that the latent
temperature of 10°C should descend 2 kil- heat release becomes insignificant even
ometers to sea level, its resultant temper- though the air is still saturated. Thus, in
ature would be very warm air near sea level, the wet adi-
abatic lapse rate may be as little as 4°C
per kilometer (22°F per 1000 feet), but in
Thus, atmospheric subsidence greatly warms the middle troposphere the wet adiabatic
the air and typically creates a temperature lapse rate commonly approaches the dry
inversion (increase of temperature with adiabatic lapse rate. At a temperature of
height) at the bottom of the subsiding layer. -40°C (-40"F), the wet adiabatic lapse
Near the surface of the earth, temper- rate 1s more than 9°C per kilometer (5°F
ature changes in the atmosphere are pri- per 1000 feet).
marily nonadiabatic, or diabatic, because
of the intensification of other transfer pro-
cesses. such as radiation exchanges, con-
Atmospheric Stability
duction. and turbulence. Superadiabatic The stability characteristics of the atmo-
lapse rates are common in air immediately sphere are very important, since they de-
above the earth's surface when the inso- termine what kinds of vertical motions are
lation is intense and the surface is dry, likely to take place, and hence whether or
since sensible heat is added to the surface not severe storms might develop. Abso-
air more rapidly than it can be mixed lutely stable air resists all vertical motion.
upward. Such conditions do not usually Although it might be forced to rise by some
extend very far upward into the atmo- external process, such as the wind blowing
sphere, although over very hot desert sur- over a mountain range, it would never rise
faces they commonly extend hundreds or under its own volition, initiated only by
even se\.eral thousands of meters. Such energy contained within the air itself. Un-
conditions typically produce extreme tur- stable air, on the other hand, would not
bulence in the lower troposphere. resist motion, and once set in motion would
Rising air will eventually cool t o its dew continue that motion until changed by some
point, after which condensation begins. The outside force. Usually the state of the at-
level at which this takes place is known as mosphere is somewhere between these ex-
the cor?de~zsationle~lelin the atmosphere tremes. It might be potentially unstable,
Adiabatic Processes and Atmospheric Stability 97

provided some outside force carried i t The vertical cross-sections of tempera-


through some process to a stage that crossed ture and humidity above given points reveal
the threshold of instability within the at- the stability characteristics of the atmo-
mosphere. sphere. The degree of stability can best be
The stability state of the atmosphere is illustrated by running through an example
determined by the availability of energy of the procedure used every day by weather
sources that are functions of the temper- forecasters utilizing some form of ther-
ature distribution with height and the water modynamic diagram. The diagram used
vaper content of the air, which represents here is the so-called "pseudo-adiabatic
an energy source in the form of latent heat. chart," which is composed of two principal
These two parameters (temperature and coordinates, atmospheric pressure, repre-
hum~dity)are observed through a vertical sented by horizontal lines, and temperature,
cross-section of much of the troposphere represented by vertical lines. Upon these
by a device known as a radiosonde-a small two coordinates are superimposed three or
box filled with instruments to measure pres- four other sets of lines that are mathe-
sure, temperature, and humidity and a small matically related to pressure and temper-
radio transmitter to radio the information ature (Figure 8.1).
back to the ground as the box is carried The slanting light gray lines are known
aloft by a large hydrogen-filled balloon. The as the dry adiabatic lines. These slope at
radio signals are received at the surface an angle that equals the dry adiabatic lapse
and translated into temperature and mlxing rate, 10°C per kilometer (5.5"F per thousand
ratio data for corresponding pressure levels. feet). The slightly sloping darker-gray lines
The upper winds may be measured at the are the saturation mixing ratio lines. They
same time by receiving the signals with show how many grams of moisture per
directional antennas. The balloon normally kilogram of dry air are needed to saturate
rises to 15-20 kilometers, at which height the air at any pressure and temperature
it has expanded under reduced atmospheric shown on the graph. The dashed gray lines
pressure to its elastic limit, whereupon it are the wet (pseudo) adiabatic lines rep-
bursts and falls back to earth. The radio- resenting the rate of change of temperature
sonde is protected from destruction by a with height for saturated air that is moving
small parachute that opens on descent. upward and condensing moisture as it cools.
The data thus gathered are used to con- The temperature then decreases less rapidly
struct (a) vertical profiles of temperature than the dry adiabatic rate, because the
and humidity through the troposphere above latent heat of condensation is being released
given points on the earth's surface and (b) into the air. At lower elevations (higher
constant pressure charts that show heights, temperatures) the wet adiabatic lapse rate
winds, and temperatures over large portions is much less than the dry adiabatic lapse
of the earth at standard pressure levels, rate (on the order of 4°C per kilometer)
such as the maps shown in Figures 6.13 because of the great amount of water vapor
to 6.17. They are also used to construct being condensed. But at higher elevations
charts that illustrate the thickness of at- (cooler temperatures) where saturation mix-
mospheric layers between given pressure ing ratios are low, the wet adiabatic lapse
levels, which can indicate something about rate approaches the dry adiabatic lapse rate,
thermal winds and, over time, reveal areas as the latent heat of condensation becomes
of divergence and convergence, vertical mo- negligible. Thus, the wet adiabatic lines are
tions, and changes in stability character- not straight lines, but curve upward to the
istics. left on the graph. The sixth set of lines,
P R E S S U R E (mb)
Adiabatic: Processes and Atmospheric Stability 99

the dotted gray lines that slope upward To determine the stability characteristics
slightly toward the left, give a crude in- of the air under the process of mechanical
dication of the height above sea level ac- lifting, raise the surface point through the
cording to standard pressure and temper- rest of the air and observe how its tem-
ature relationships. perature changes. Initially, as long as the
The solid black line on the graph rep- air is not saturated, the temperature change
resents the actual lapse rate curve, at a parallels the dry adiabatic lines. But at
given time over a given point, that has point A on the graph, the temperature path
resulted from observations of pressures and of the rising surface parcel crosses the 18-
temperatures at different levels by a radio- gram line and the rising air becomes sat-
sonde run. It can be seen that the surface urated. Above this point the temperature
temperature was 26°C (approximately 78°F) decreases at the wet adiabatic rate. as shown
and there was a slight temperature inversion by the dashed line ABC. At point B the
at the surface that extended upward for temperature path of the rising parcel crosses
only a few hundred meters. Above the the originally plotted lapse rate curve. This
inversion for a short distance, the air had means that the temperature of the rising
almost a dry adiabatic lapse rate, but then parcel becomes warmer than the surround-
the lapse rate decreased and remained fairly ing air, and therefore no more outside force
consistent to the 400-millibar level, where is necessary to keep the surface parcel
the temperature fell to - 10°C. moving upward: above point B. which is
The moisture content was also recorded known as the level of free con\-ection, the
at each point, but for this first approxi- rising air is buoyed up by the fact that it
mation of stability characteristics, only the is warmer, hence lighter, than its environ-
mixing ratio at the surface point is needed. ment at every level. Hence, the air no longer
Let us assume initially that the actual mix- resists upward motion and becomes un-
ing ratio measured at the surface point was stable. The motivating energy is the latent
18 grams of moisture per kilogram of dry heat of condensation that is constantly being
air. From this diagram relative humidities released as the air rises. The air, thus, is
and dew points can easily be computed, conditionally unstable. On the condition
because the equations that relate them to that some mechanical force (mountain range,
pressures and temperatures have already front) is provided to lift the air to point
been represented graphically. It can be seen B, the air becomes unstable, and a thun-
that the saturation mixing ratio for the derstorm will likely develop.
surface point is approximately 21 grams The temperature path of the rising parcel
per kilogram. Since it is known that the recrosses the plotted lapse rate curve at
actual mixing ratio was 18, one simply point C, and once again the rising parcel
divides 18 by 21 to get the relative humidity, becomes colder than its surroundings and
which is approximately 86 percent. To get resists upward motion. Assuming no out-
the dew point, one moves the surface point side force is available at this height, upward
to the left at the constant pressure of 1010 motion will cease at point C, and this will
millibars until the 18-gram saturation mix- mark the top of cumulus-type clouds. The
ing ratio line is crossed, and then reads temperature path of the rising parcel re-
directly below, point G on the adiabatic crosses the plotted lapse rate curve because
diagram. It can be seen that the dew point the wet adiabatic lines are curved upward
is about 23.4"C, or almost 74°F. Since all to the left. If the capacity of the air to
three temperature scales are given on the hold moisture decreased at a constant rate
graph, it is easy to convert from one tem- with decreasing temperature, such would
perature to another. not happen, and theoretically there would
100 Adiabatic Processes and Atmospheric Stability 1
!

be no limit to the upward motion of the vective currents only. It also now becomes
surface air, hence no upper limit to the the level of free convection, since above
buildup of clouds. But since the capacity that point the air will follow a temperature
of the air to hold moisture decreases at a path to the right of the plotted lapse rate
decreasing rate with decreasing tempera- curve. To see how high the surface tem-
ture, the amount of moisture, and hence perature would have to get for the air to
the latent heat release, eventually becomes be lifted to point E, drop a line parallel
negligible with cold temperatures, and an to the dry adiabatic line to the surface
upper limit to instability is thus set. pressure at point F. An adiabatic lapse rate
To indicate the significance of moisture has now been hypothetically created from
content to stability, let us assume that the F to E along which any heated air can
surface air has a mixing ratio of only 13 move without resistance, because it will
grams per kilogram. As the surface air always be at the same temperature as its
parcel rises the temperature will again ini- surroundings at each level in its rising path.
tially change at the dry adiabatic rate. But At point E condensation begins, the latent
this time the temperature path of the rising heat of condensation is added to the air,
parcel will parallel the dry adiabatic lines and the temperature path of the rising
up to point D, where the 13-gram line parcel then parallels the wet adiabatic
crosses. The condensation level, and hence curves, which puts it to the right of all the
the base of the cloud formation, has now other curves on the graph (not shown).
lifted from A to D. Above D the air will Thus, this air could be made unstable
condense moisture and the temperature will if the surface temperature were raised to
change at the wet adiabatic rate, line DH. about 32°C (89°F). With lift due to surface
The temperature path of the rising parcel heating, the condensation level is higher
never crosses the original plotted lapse rate than it was with mechanical lift, because
curve. Hence, the air resists motion all the the air is first heated and then cooled
way up and never becomes unstable; the adiabatically as convective currents set in.
air is now absolutely stable. It could still But the condensation level now is also the
be forced to rise by some outside mech- level of free convection, which is lower in
anism. such as a mountain range or a front, the atmosphere than it was with mechanical
when clouds would form above the con- lift. Therefore, instability begins at a lower
densation level, and perhaps even precip- level and extends to a higher level, since
itation would take place; but the air will the temperature path of the rising parcel
always remain stable, and the cloud type is now farther to the right on the diagram.
now will be stratus rather than cumulus. This is the kind of instability that may
The previous two examples assume that occur on a hot summer day over south-
a mechanical lift initiates the upward mo- eastern United States in warm, moist air
tion of the surface air. Nevertheless, strong coming from the Gulf of Mexico. Typically,
heating at the surface may cause convective this kind of air produces many scattered
activity to extend from the surface upward thunderstorms throughout humid summer
to the level of free convection, above which afternoons.
the air continues on an unstable course. Initially stable air may be made unstable
To test for that, mark the point where the by lifting a thick layer that has a large
mixing ratio of the surface air crosses the humidity lapse rate. The wet air in the
plotted lapse rate curve. In our initial ex- lower part of the layer may reach its con-
ample, the 18-gram line crosses the plotted densation level before the drier upper part
curve at point E. This is the condensation of the layer does, which means that with
level for the surface air if lifted bv con- continued lift the lower air cools at the wet
Adiabatic Processes and Atmospheric Stabilitv 101

adiabatic rate, while the upper air is still not vary throughout the layer. Since the
cooling at the dry adiabatic rate. In essence, atmosphere becomes less dense with height,
the lower air is being warmed relative to the top of a column of air must rise more
the upper air by the release of the latent than the bottom to experience the same
heat of condensation. Such a condition is pressure decrease. Since adiabatic temper-
known as convective instability and can be ature changes are directly related to changes
responsible for severe thunderstorm tur- in height, not pressure, the top of the
bulence and tornado formation in areas column will cool more than the bottom.
such as the Great Plains of North America Thus the lapse rate will be steepened. The
where, during summer, dry air from the- opposite is true with descending (subsiding)
southwestern deserts frequently overruns air. Active subsidence typically produces a
moist air from the Gulf of Mexico. temperature inversion, hence extreme sta-
Lifting of a thick layer of air will decrease bility, at the base of the subsiding column.
stability even if the moisture content does
9 1 AIR MASSES AND FRONTS

1 ~
I
i

Air within a circulation cell that shows


Air Masses a relatively high degree of homogeneity over
Since the air in the lower troposphere out- a broad horizontal area is known as an air
side the equatorial doldrums circulates pri- mass. It is distinguishable by its temper-
marily around cells quasi-parallel to iso- ature, moisture, and stability characteris-
bars, at least above the friction layer, such tics, which, in combination with its tem-
cells become persistent through time, and perature relative to the earth's surface,
the air within them becomes thoroughly produce predictable associations of weather.
mixed and hon~ogeneousin the horizontal Of course, if a circulation system occupies
plane and distinct from adjacent circula- an area hundreds, or even thousands, of
tions with which there is little air exchange. kilometers in radius, the air will not be
This is particularly true in high pressure completely homogeneous from one side to
cells, where friction at the surface causes another. Temperatures will be higher on
the air to diverge gradually away from the the equatorial edge of the air m a s s t h a n
center of the cell. thus inducing subsidence on the poleward edge, and moisture and
in the vertical dimension and a spreading stability characteristics may vary also.
out of similar air over a large area at the Nonetheless. there is much less variation
surface. On the other hand, low pressure within an air mass than between it and
cells at the surface are areas of convergence adjacent air masses.
of different kinds of air from various points Over very broad circulation systems,
on the periphery of the circulation system, such as the subtropical highs over the oceans,
and therefore usually do not lead to ho- very different types of air may develop at
mogeneity of air over a wide area. opposite ends. For example, the air on the
Some cells of circulation are persistent eastern end of the North Atlantic subtrop- 1 :
in their configuration and location. Some ical high has circulated for thousands of
are even permanent, such as the subtropical kilometers across the middle and northern
high pressure cells over the oceans of both portions of the North Atlantic over rela-
hemispheres. Others are more transitory, tively cool water and has then turned south-
retaining their characteristics only for a ward around the eastern end of the high,
number of days, or weeks at most; and where it has undergone subsidence that has
during that time they may move long dis- produced a strong temperature inversion
tances and come into contact with varying at or near the surface. such conditions
surfaces. Such shifting of positions brings produce extreme atmospheric stability, 1
about exchanges of heat and moisture be- rainlessness, cool surface temperatures, near
tween the surface and the air, which ul- atmospheric saturation, and much fog and
timately modify the air significantly. low stratus clouds. As the air turns west-
Air Masses and Fronts 103

ward it circulates across thousands of kilo- lation in some latitudes and in some land-
meters of very warm water, which injects sea and topographic configurations. Stag-
heat and moisture into the air and lifts the nation may take place in otheiareas because
inversion layer on its westward course. As of interior locations between mountain
it turns northward around the western end ranges, and so forth. Examples are the
of the high, the air is very warm with a intermontane region in southwestern United
high mixing ratio and unstable or condi- States and northern Mexico which develops
tionally unstable characteristics that induce very hot dry air during summer. and the
'much vertical turbulence, cumulus cloud similar Central Asian area east of the Cas-
buildup, and thundershowers. The surface pian Sea.
air is warm and muggy. with high tem- During winter the Mackenzie River val-
peratures combined with high relative hu- ley in northwestern Canada receives streams
midities. Since the subtropical highs tilt of air from various directions off the Arctic
eastward and equatorward, the strongest and Pacific oceans? after which the air
subsidence is on the eastern-equatorward stagnates and cools over the sno\v-covered
periphery of the cell, and the weakest sub- land surface. This process ultimately results
sidence or uplift is on the western-poleward in a cold, stable air mass with a low mixing
side of the cell. ratio that may extend two or three kilo-
meters into the air and produce high surface
pressures. When the air pressure has built
Source Regions
up enough. the air mass typically bulges
Two conditions are necessary for air masses southward, and a cell buds off from the
to form: (a) a large. relatively homogeneous main air mass to move out of the source
, , portion of the earth's surface. and (b) air region southeastward into central United
stagnation or long trajectory over that sur- States. Such a discrete cell may separate
face sufficient for a significant thickness of from the main body of an air mass and
the air to take on the characteristics of the move en masse thousands of kilometers
surface. Exchanges of heat and moisture downstream, where it slowly modifies over
must take place between the earth's surface continuously changing surfaces and even-
and the air above so equilibrium between tually loses its identity.
the two can be reached. This takes time- Sometimes broad streams of air flood
at least several days, and perhaps weeks. areas downstream with a given type of air
Portions of the earth's surface that satisfy without forming discrete circulation cells
these two conditions are known as air mass apart from the main bodies of parent air
source regions. Examples are the oceanic masses in their source regions. Such are
areas dominated by the subtropical high the warm, moist, unstable air masses that
pressure cells and certain land areas. Par- move poleward along the western edges of
ticularly in winter, when they do not receive subtropical highs and the relatively cool,
much sunlight, large portions of the land stable air masses that move equatorward
in high latitudes are covered with snow along their eastern edges.
that presents a fairly homogeneous albedo Air masses are designated according to
and radiation emission. Certain desert areas their source regions as being maritime or
may act as source regions during summer continental in origin, and equatorial, trop-
months. ical, polar, or arctic (or antarctic). Thus,
Air may tend to stagnate over certain an air mass may be designated as m T
, , areas of the earth's surface because of the (maritime tropical), cT (continental trop-
character of the general circulation of the ical), m P (maritime polar), cP (continental
atmosphere, which forms nodes of circu- polar), and so forth. In the middle latitudes
104
I
Air Masses and Fronts II
I

where the contrasts between adjacent air low surface temperatures are reached (com-
masses are greatest, the primary air masses monly -50"--70"C), despite the fact that
1
are mT, cP, and mP, with cT significant the air one or two kilometers above the
in dry land areas. Such designations have
become rather standard, although some of
surface is commonly 20" to 30°C warmer
than the snow surface. The snow radiates
. I
!
them are sort of misnomers. For instance, heat upward, and the warm inversion layer I
the polar air masses do not originate at of air radiates heat downward into the
the poles, but in the subpolar and higher colder air below. Because of its colder tem- .
middle latitudes, and are typically ,found perature, the snow radiates heat less intently
throughout the middle latitudes, while the at any wavelength than does the warm air
polar areas are dominated by arctic or above. But the snow radiates heat across a
antarctic air. Soviet climatologists refer to full spectrum of wavelengths according to
temperate air masses in the middle latitudes its temperature, while the atmosphere, being
rather than to polar air masses, but this made up of a mixture of gases, radiates
is an ambiguous designation also, since ihe
word "temperate" has been used to en-
compass a multitude of conditions.
heat only at certain wavelengths that cor-
respond to the radiation and absorption
characteristics of the gases in the air. There-
I
fore, the spectrum of radiation coming from
the upper air is far from complete, and the
Weather Associations
sun1 total of radiation upward from the i
Air masses are typically associated with snow surface is greater until the temperature 1
1
certain types of weather that correspond of the snow surface reaches very low values. ii
to their water content, stability character- After that, an equilibrium is reached, and
istics, and temperatures relative to the sur- surface air temperatures remain essentially i
faces over which they are traveling. For constant until some advection of different 1
I

instance. cP air during midwinter in its kinds of air upsets the situation, when the ii
source region will have taken on the cold process is repeated to reestablish an equi-
temperatures of the underlying snow-cov- librium temperature.
ered surface, which will have led to low Such equilibrium temperatures are gen-
mixing ratio content, the formation of a erally reached initially in December in
temperature inversion based at the surface, places such as northwestern Canada and
and extreme atmospheric stability. In spite Siberia, and from then on the temperature
of the fact that the surface temperature varies little until it begins to warm up
inversion with its resultant stability essen- again with increased insolation as the spring
tially rules out convectional mixing, the equinox is approached. Thus, the inhabi-
cooling effects from the surface continue tants of Siberia talk about their "coreless"
to extend upward into the air, because of winters, which do not have temperatures
the peculiar reflective and radiative prop- arranged symmetrically about a minimum
erties of snow. Fresh snow reflects at least point in January or February but, instead,
90 percent of incident short-wave radiation, consistent temperatures with some non-
which is already minimal at this time of ' periodic variations from December, or even
year at high latitudes. And it radiates almost late November, through early March.
perfectly (as a black body) at longer wave- When cP air moves out of its source i
lengths in the infrared, where all the ter- region in northwestern Canada southeast-
restrial radiation is because of cold tem- ward into the United States it moves across
peratures. Thus, the snow assures that little a surface with (usually) constantly increas-
heat is received and much heat is lost. ing temperatures that are everywhere
There is net radiation u ~ w a r duntil verv warmer than the surface temDerature of
Air Masses and Fronts 105

the air. Thus, it is classified as a "k" (cold) when the cP air coming south from Canada
air mass. The term "cold" is relative, mean- is still cold and the ground surface over
ing simply that the air mass is colder than which it is moving has already warmed up
the surface over which it is traveling. The greatly. If the temperature is cold enough
air mass will be modified as it moves over there may be snow showers, but this is
the warmer surface, receiving heat, and more common in the Midwest during the
probably moisture, from the underlying onset of winter, when the first cold blasts
surface as it goes. The heating at the surface of Canadian air move over a still relatively
will cause convective currents to set up in warm surface. Graupel (snow pellets) are y,

the lower air, which cause a vigorous mixing common occurrences with such weather.
of moisture and pollutants upward, making The showery weather, whether it is rain or
good surface visibility. snow, is known as instability showers, since
If the air is much colder than the surface, it is caused by low-level instability due to
the convection may be vigorous enough to surface heating. Such weather is commonly
produce small cumulus clouds with well associated with the leading edge of a con-
defined bases at a common level-the con- tinental polar outbreak i n midwestern
densation level of the surface air-and tops United States after the passage of a cold
that are limited by the high degree of front associated with a cyclonic storm.
stability of the upper air, which has not Figure 9.1 shows a typical lapse rate
yet been modified from its cP origin. Gen- curve for a cPk air mass moving southward
erally such cumulus are no more than a out of Canada into midwestern United
few hundred meters thick. with much blue States. Initially the entire air mass is quite
sky in between individual clouds. They stable, as illustrated by line D-C and above.
have become known as "cumulus of fair but as the air moves southward over warmer
1

weather," although this may seem a con- land the surface air heats to a temperature
tradiction in terms. since if there are clouds of lWC, as shown at point A. which es-
the weather is not entirely fair. The con- tablishes a dry adiabatic lapse rate upward
notation is that these cumulus are not going to about 850 millibars (1.6 kilometers above
to result in much because the air a few the surface). The surface air can now move
hundred meters above the ground is very freely throughout this lowest layer, with
stable. They are produced entirely by day- moving air parcels remaining at the same
time heating at the surface and will dissipate 'temperature as their surroundings at each
soon after sundown. Such is the weather level. At point B the surface air. with a
usually associated with k air masses-crisp, mixing ratio of 6 grams per kilogram,
clear surface visibility, and cumulus of fair becomes saturated, and above that point
weather. it cools at the wet adiabatic rate. This causes
Occasionally, if the temperature differ- an unstable layer between points B and C,
ential between a k air mass and the surface above which the rising air once again be-
over which it is traveling is very great, and comes colder than its surroundings. Thus,
if enough moisture is available, the cumulus cumulus of fair weather are formed with
buildup may reach showery proportions, their bases around 1500 feet (point B) and
and the weather for the day will be marked their tops around 7500 feet (point C). They
by sharp bursts of showers that last only cannot grow any taller because the upper
a few minutes at a time, interspersed by air is still quite stable, not having been
clear, sunny weather in between. One short modified by processes going on at the sur-
shower after another may continue through face. Often a small letter "s" is added to
much of the day. This is particularly com- the symbol cPk to designate that the air
mon in the U.S. Midwest during spring, is still stable aloft (cPks).
PRESSURE l m b )
, .
Air Masses and Fronts 107

Maritime tropical air moving up the might prove to be an mTk air mass as it
, , Mississippi Valley from the Gulf of Mexico encounters warmer temperatures over the
is usually a "w" (warm) air mass, partic- land as it moves northward. The surface
ularly during cooler seasons. Modification temperature might warm to 37°C (98"F),
takes place by heat loss from the warmer which would then produce a dry adiabatic
air to the cooler surface, thereby stabilizing lapse rate from point C up to point D, the
and stratifying the surface air. This often condensation level where the 22 grams of
leads to poor surface visibility, haze, and moisture in the air saturates the air. Point
even fog, or large amounts of dew, de- D also becomes the level of free convection,
pending upon the motion of the air. The since the rising air (dashed line) above that
m T air is commonly warm, humid, and point everywhere is warmer than its sur-
perhaps conditionally unstable, but the roundings. Since the initial lapse rate curve
cooling at the surface stabilizes the surface slopes at an angle intermediate between
air and rules out convective activity. the wet adiabatic lines and the dry adiabatic
During summer, maritime tropical air lines, the air mass is conditionally unstable,
moving northward up the Mississippi Val- and surface heating during a hot summer
ley from the Gulf of Mexico may actually afternoon may be enough to trigger thun-
be a "k" air mass, even though its tem- derstorms. If the surface temperature reaches
peratures may be more than 30°C (86°F). 37°C or above, this will happen.
The air over the Gulf at that time of year In the first instance, the cooler land
typically has surface temperatures of 86°F stabilized the lower 2000 feet of the air
but the land in the Mississippi Valley, mass. but the air still remained condition-
perhaps even as far north as Wisconsin ally unstable aloft. This conditional insta-
, , and Minnesota, may be between 90" and bility was released in the second instance
100"F, or even above 100". Thus, as the air when the warmer land heated the surface
moves northward from the Gulf it is heated air. Thus, the same air mass can be either
at the surface; this process may easily set a k air mass or a w air mass. depending
off convectional thunderstorms since the upon its relation to the temperature at the
air commonly is conditionally unstable and surface, and very different types of weather
has such high relative humidity that it does will result. In either case, the small letter
not have to rise very high to reach the "u" might be added behind the mTk or
condensation level, after which the latent the mTw, to indicate unstable conditions
heat released is usually enough to buoy the aloft.
air on upward. Continental tropical air, such as that
Figure 9.2 illustrates a typical maritime which forms in southwestern United States
tropical air mass moving northward from during summer and in extensive subtropical
the Gulf of Mexico up the Mississippi deserts such as the Sahara, has exceedingly
Valley. Initially, over the Gulf, its surface high surface temperatures and low relative
temperature is 30°C (86"F), as shown at humidities. The great heating at the surface
point A. In late spring or early summer causes strong convectional activity up to
as it moves northward over the land it perhaps two or three kilometers above the
encounters cooler temperatures, and the ground, but above that extensions of sub-
surface air temperature cools to 26"C, il- tropical highs generally predominate and
lustrated by point B, which is below the form temperature inversions that suppress
dew point, assuming a surface mixing ratio convection. Since the surface air has such
', of 22 grams per kilogram. This produces low relative humidity, the convective ac-
a surface temperature inversion, surface tivity usually is not enough to raise the
stability, and poor visibility, perhaps fog. surface air to its condensation level, and
Later in summer, the same air mass therefore the air remains cloudless even
PRESSURE lmbl
A A

8
'"
0
LAO
0
0
0
ID
0
0
m
0
0
V
0
0
0)
0
0
OI
0
0
P
0
0
Air Masses and Fronts 109

though the first two or three kilometers of most weather (other than clear weather) is
air are extremely turbulent. cT air is usually associated with boundary zones between
a summer phenomenon only. air masses. Since most identifiable air masses
Maritime polar air moving around the are associated with high pressure cells, the
poleward edges of the subtropical high pres- typical weather within air masses, partic-
sure cells is typically cool, moist, and stable ularly in their source regions before they
as it moves equatonvard along the western begin to be modified by changing temper-
-. coasts of North America, Europe, and the atures at the surface, is clear, calm weather
Southern Hemisphere continents in the associated with subsiding air. Although
middle latitudes. If it penetrates far enough scattered showers may be associated with
inland, as it does over Europe, it may k air masses or fog with w air masses,
modify into a fairly unstable air mass, with these are generally mild weather phenom-
thundershower activity during summer, or ena compared to the well-organized and
become colder, drier, and more stable, sim- intense cloud systems. turbulence, a n d
ilar to cP air during winter. m P air is heavy, prolonged precipitation that may be
usually a k air mass in summer and a w associated with boundary surfaces between
air mass in winter. Such air does not pen- air masses where warmer air is forced to
etrate far inland on the North or South rise over colder air. The colder air mass
American continents, since in both cases acts as a wedge over which the warmer air
high mountains rim the Pacific. rises. expands. and cools adiabatically,
Maritime polar air dominates the west which reduces its capacity to hold moisture
coasts of these continents much of the year to the point where condensation must take
and brings much stratus clouds and fog to place, clouds form. and precipitation falls.
, ,
t h e coastal areas, but thunder is seldom Such activity generally produces broad areas
heard on the west coast of North America, of continuous overcast skies and precipi-
This may change as the air rises up the tation, and if the warm air is conditionally
windward slopes of mountains, such as the unstable it may also produce extreme tur-
Cascades and the Sierra Nevada in Wash- bulence manifested by thunderstorm activ-
ington, Oregon, and California, where the ity. Because most hazardous weather is
air may eventually reach its level of free found along these boundary zones rather
convection and thereby spawn thunder- than within the air masses themselves,
storms, the lightning from which frequently weather forecasters generally concentrate
sets off forest fires. But by the time the most of their attention on the boundary
m P air has crossed such mountain ranges zones, particularly in the middle latitudes
and descended their leeward slopes, it is where air mass contrasts are greatest and,
so modified that it can no longer be iden- hence, fronts are most intense.
tified as maritime polar air. The greatest These boundary zones have become
stability of maritime polar air is found in known as fronts because their advances and
the equatorward extremities of the eastern retreats between air masses reminded the
ends of the subtropicalhighs adjacent to Scandinavian meteorologists of the day-to-
such coasts as southern and Baja California, day shifts in the battle fronts in western
Peru, and northwestern and southwestern Europe during World War I, at the time
Africa. when the air mass and frontal theory of
the atmosphere was being developed. O n
a surface weather map fronts are shown
Fronts simply as lines, but it must be remembered
Although certain types of weather are as- that they are zones, usually several tens of
sociated with air masses. as described above. kilometers wide, and they are curved sur-
110 Air Masses and Fronts

faces that extend upward into the atmo- from satellites which, of course, is the re-
sphere. The line on the surface weather verse of the intent for locating fronts on
map represents only the intersection of the maps-to understand and predict the dis-
frontal surface with the ground. tributions of clouds and precipitation.
As can be seen in Figures 9.3 and 9.4,
the convergence zone is generally contin-
Distribution uous over the oceans and fairly constant
There are three main frontal systems on in its location, particularly in the Pacific
earth. Their approximate mean positions and Atlantic oceans. In the Indian Ocean
for January and July are shown on Figures its latitudinal position fluctuates widely by
9.3 and 9.4, along with the air mass types season, because of the unusual development
they separate. They shift seasonally, along of the monsoons in this part of the world.
with the wind and pressure belts, as a result During summer the intertropical conver-
of the seasonal shift of insolation across gence zone is pushed north of the Tropic
the face of the earth. And within seasons of Cancer in northern India, Indonesia, and
they shift drastically, so that any daily map southern China by the strong southwesterly
might look quite different from these av- monsoon winds that blow into thermal lows
erage maps. over the Asian continent at that time of
1. The first of the three frontal zones is year. The convergence zone is broken across
the intertropical,fio~~t, or better termed the equatorial South America by the high Andes.
ilztertropical conre,;ornce zone (ITCZ), since In both South America and south Africa
it is not a very distinct front in terms of during the Southern Hemisphere summer
air mass contrasts across it. It is a broad (January), the convergence zone tends to
zone of convergence between the northeast become oriented more north-south than
trade winds in the Northern Hemisphere east-west in the interiors of these land
and the southeast trade winds in the South- masses. Over the Pacific and Atlantic oceans,
ern Hemisphere. Both of these wind sys- the ITCZ tends to lie north of the geo-
tems carry maritime tropical unstable air graphical equator at all times because of
masses. so there is little contrast in tem- the generally stronger atmospheric circu-
perature. humidity. and stability conditions lation in the Southern Hemisphere.
across the front. But because both air masses 2. The second set of fronts is the polar
are warm, moist, and unstable, they have pant in each hemisphere. This again is a
greater capabilities for producing clouds misnomer, since these fronts are in the
and precipitation, and copious amounts of middle latitudes rather than in the polar
precipitation fall along this front more than regions. They are by far the most distinct
any other. The ITCZ is generally in an fronts in terms of air mass contrasts. They
area of little surface observational record, generally separate cP air from m T air,
with much of the area over oceans, so not particularly in the continental areas of the
much is known about its structure. It is middle latitudes of the Northern Hemi-
often a diffuse area of convergence with sphere. In ,.oceanic areas they sometimes
little discernible frontal surface. Probably separate one variant of m P air from another
much of the time the converging surface variant of m P air. This may also occur
air is rising approximately vertically with- over land areas where maritime polar air
out any perceptible frontal slope. In these has free access, such as in western Europe,
tropical regions of little surface weather where the polar front typically separates
information, the front is often located on fresh m P air on the west from a modified
daily weather maps simply by the associated form of m P air on the east. The polar front
cloud bands and precipitation, observed may also separate some variant of m P air
Air Masses and Fronts 113

from some variant of m T air. This usually trasting surface temperatures that in sum-
occurs when the polar front moves into mer are considerably warmer over the land
lower latitudes, almost always during winter than over the adjacent seas, and in winter
when, of course, the m T air is not very are colder over the land than over the
classical tropical air. adjacent seas. Therefore these coastal areas
The polar front is very discontinuous are quite windy and may experience nu-
and distorted in its orientation. Its position merous blizzards.
fluctuates latitudinally much more than the Of all the fronts, the polar front has
intertropical convergence zbne; at any sea- attracted by far the most attention, since
son it may be found anywhere in North it lies in the middle latitudes and strongly
America from southern Canada southward affects many of the more-developed coun-
across the entire United States into the tries of the world. The typical character-
Gulf of Mexico and Central America. The istics of fronts described in the following
polar front's presence is much less felt in section relate specifically to the polar front,
the interior of Asia. In the Southern Hemi- particularly in North America.
sphere it is more continuous around the
earth, since there is little land in the middle
latitudes. But the air mass contrasts across Characteristics
it are usually less than in the Northern Fronts are labeled "cold" or "warm" ac-
Hemisphere. since all air masses associated cording to the direction they are moving.
with it are u s u a l l ~some
~ form of maritime If the cold air is advancing at the surface
polar. Nevertheless, since all the air masses at the expense of the warm air, then the
are of a maritime origin, the polar front front is a cold front; if the warm air is
in the Southern Hemisphere spawns much advancing at the expense of the cold air.
storminess. cloudiness, and precipitation. it is a warm front. If the front is stalled
3. The third set of fronts includes the or, more likely. oscillating back and forth
Aretic at7d.-1r1lnr.ctic.fi.onfsin the two hemi- with little net change in position, it is called
spheres. They usually separate some variant a stationary front. In any case, the warm
of continental polar or arctic air from some air is being forced to rise over the cold
variant of maritime polar or arctic air. air. The warm air is cooled adiabatically
They are very discontinuous and difficult by the lift, and the resultant condensation
to locate. Like the intertropical convergence forms, cloud formations, turbulence, and
zone, they frequently lie in uninhabited precipitation types and amounts relate pri-
areas where little information on surface marily to the characteristics of the warm
air pressures and winds is available. But air mass. They also relate somewhat to the
unlike the ITCZ, the Arctic front does not vertical structure of the front and the at-
produce much precipitation, since the air mospheric circulation associated with it.
masses associated with it always have low Although the type of front is determined
temperatures and therefore little capacity by the direction of motion, each type of
for holding moisture. Segments of the Arctic front tends to take on a certain form and
front may spawn cyclonic storms that may associated weather phenomena as a result
produce rather frequent precipitation, usu- of the characteristics of the motion taking
ally in the form of snow, but never very place. A cold front tends to have an initial
much in amount. Segments of the Arctic steep slope that tapers rapidly aloft and
and Antarctic fronts usually form some- usually reaches heights of no more than
where near the coasts of northern Norrh three kilometers, while a warm front tends
America, Eurasia, and the Antarctic. In to have a more-constant slope and even-
those positions they lie in regions of con- tually extends to considerably greater
I 114 Air Masses and Fronts

heights. The difference in the initial slopes drawn accurately to scale. Thus, in the next
of the two fronts may be due largely to chapter, figures showing vertical cross sec-
frictional effects between the air and the tions of fronts will greatly exaggerate the
ground. Since the cold air under a cold vertical dimension with respect to the hor-
front is pushing forward, it is retarded by izontal. Although the air rising up a frontal
friction with the ground, while the cold air surface may move 100 kilometers or more
under a warm front is being dragged back, horizontally while moving only one kilo-
and friction with the ground tends to elon- meter vertically, vertical motion is the sig-
gate its surface extent. nificant one, since it produces adiabatic
Slopes of fronts are usually no more than cooling of the warm air and resultant con-
I or 2 percent, if that, which would be densation and associated phenomena.
impossible to show in a small diagram
10 FLOW PERTURBATIONS IN
THE MIDDLE LATITUDES

cold air advancing. As the counterclockwise


Waves
circulation intensifies, the wave increases
A frontal surface is a zone of relatively in magnitude and shortens in Iensth ~vhilc
rapid change in atmospheric density. Al- the cold front catches up with the warm
though it is not an absolute discontinuity. front (D).
such as the interface between the atmo- In part E an occlusion process begins.
sphere and a standing water body. it never- with one front riding up the slope of the
theless acts similarly in producing wave other front. lvhich squeezes the warm air
motion. Just as the wind whips up waves completely off the ground in the apes of
on the ocean surface. so also do differential rhe wa\-e. The occlusion produces masi-
air movements along frontal surfaces within mum uplift of rhe warm ail- and thereby
the atmosphere. But since most of the air creates the most intense stage of the storm:
motion is horizontal. the waves created but the occluded stage is also the beginning
within the atmosphere along frontal sur- of the end of the wave formation. since
faces tend to have much greater horizontal the air mass contrast across the front at
dimensions than vertical ones. the ground- tends to be destroyed by the
F i g ~ ~ r10.1
e illustrates the life cycle of occlusion process. Cold air is no\v on both
wave formation along a frontal surface in sides of the Sront at the surface.
the Northern Hemisphere. Initially. a Either side can be the colder. depending
straight front separates cold air to the north upon the situation. Often the western side
from warm air to the south. In addition is colder because that is the region of most
to the temperature contrasts and perhaps active intrusion of fresh air from the cold
differences in other characteristics, such as air mass, the area where the cold air has !
humidity, the front separates two opposing had the least amount of time to be modified
air flows that tend to set up waves along by contact with the ground. In certain
the frontal surface. Around the apex of the instances. however, the air on the eastern
wave. a counterclockwise flow develops that side of the front may be colder because it
serves as a sort of third cog to take u p the is typically farther poleward in association
friction between the opposing air flows: as with waves that are moving from southwest
shown in portion C of Figure 10.1. The to northeast. If the air to the west under
right half of the front now moves as a warm the cold front is colder than the air to the
front, with the warm air advancing at the eastunder the warm front. the warm front
expense of the cold air, while the left half rides up the slope of the cold front and
of the front moves as a cold front with the the occlusion is a cold-front-type occlusion,
A
-
- COLD

-
- WARM

B * COLD

*
WARM

-
- COLD FRONT
WARM FRONT
OCCLUDED FRONT
STATIONARY FRONT
-
RED
PURPLE
Alternate
BLUE & RED
WARM

As Shown
on Dally
Weather Map

-- .
Figure 10.1. Life cycle of a wave formation on a middle-latitude front in the Northern
Her~zisphere.
' Flow Perturbations in the Middle Latitudes 117

since the cold front stays on the ground. refers to a violent. small whirl of wind. In
Figure 10.2 shows this in a vertical cross the Bay of Bengal area east of India, the
section along the line a b in part F of Figure term "cyclone' has been used to denote a
10.1. But if the air on the eastern side of hurricane-type storm. Within the context
the occlusion under the warm front is colder of this book. unless otherwise specified,
than the air on the western side of the "cyclone" will refer to middle- and higher-
occlusion under the cold front, the warm latitude low pressure centers with frontal
front stays on the ground and the occlusion systems in them.
is a warm-front-type occlusion (see Figure A typical mature. partiaily occluded
10.2). Northern Hemisphere cyclonic storm is
As the warm air is lifted higher and shown in Figure 10.3. The type of weather
higher by the occluding process, the oc- varies between different sectors of the storm.
clusion begins to die (.fiontol~~sis)at the and the type of~veatherthat can be expected
extreme tip and dissipates gradually toward as a cyclonic storm approaches depends
the original wave apex (part G, Figure 10.1). upon the part of the cyclone that is going
For a time the counterclockwise circulation to pass through one's location. The most
continues. and thin clouds remain aloft in sustained lift of warm air occurs up the
the contact zone between the lower cold warm front. since the flow of warm air in
air and the warm air above it. But even- the warm sector of the storm between the
tually all this dissipates and only the orig- fronts is usually directly up the slope of
inal front remains. By this time a secondary the warm front. This produces a large area
wave may appear along the trailing sta- of continuous overcast skies and probably
tionary front upstream from the previous precipitation. usually extending 200-300
wave. This often forms as the old occluded kilometers ahead of the surface position of
low pressure center begins to dissipate (part the warm front. Thus, the northeastern
F). This wave will likely grow and occlude quadrant of a cyclonic storm in the North-
to repeat the cycle of the previous wave. ern Hemisphere is usually the cloudiest
In so doing it may move up the front to and the one that will produce the most
join the parent low pressure center. Fre- prolonged and \videspread precipitation.
quently it traverses approximately the same Surface winds in this portion of the
territory. perhaps at a little lower latitude storm are from the east or southeast, a
than the original waxre. well-known sign of a n approaching storm
in the middle latitudes of the Northern
Hemisphere and one that has often befud-
Cyclones
dled laymen into thinking that the worst
When a low pressure center around the weather in these regions comes from the
apex of a wave becomes encircled by closed east. These easterly winds are a part of
isobars, it is known as a cyclone. This is the storm itself, however, and do not denote
primarily a phenomenon of the middle and the direction of movement of the entire
higher latitudes, where air mass contrasts storm. One must keep in mind that there
are great enough to produce distinct fronts are two motions to be considered, a cir-
and the Coriolis Force is strong enough to culatory motion around the low pressure
cause a rotary motion. In some instances center, and a translational motion from
the term "cyclone" has been used ambig- some westerly direction to some easterly
uously. In interior North America pioneers direction, typically from southwest t o
built "cyclone cellars" (underground shel- northeast in the eastern portion of the
ters from tornadoes) and confused the term United States. Thus. in Figure 10.3. al-
"cyclone" with the term "tornado," which though the first harbingers of the storm are
118 Flow Perturbations in the Middle Latitudes

__t COOL AIR v COLD AIR

Rain & Foo ' '

WARM AIR

COLD AIR
pJgJF3
djw

Figure 10.2. Vertical cross-section of occlusion along line ab in part F, Figure 10.1.
(A)Warm-front-type occlusion; ( B ) cold-front-type occlusion.

easterly surface winds, the storm is moving most severe thunderstorms are generally
in from the southwest. located along the cold front. Since this front
The southeastern portion of a cyclone has an abrupt lower slope, the warm air
is the warm sector. In eastern United States undergoes its most active rise here, which
the warm air mass is some variant of frequently triggers instability that produces
maritime tropical air with relatively high severe thunderstorms. often in a continuous
temperatures. high humidities, and con- line all along the front. But since the front
ditional instability. Weather in this sector tapers off rather rapidly in the upper air,
is typified by scattered clouds, commonly these storms do not extend far behind the
of a cumulus nature, and associated scat- front, typically no more than 30-40 kilo-
tered showers. perhaps thunderstorms. But meters at most. beyond which the weather
Flow Perturbations in the Middle Latitudes 119

30 kmhr.

Figure 10.3. Partially occluded middle-latitude cyclone in the Northern Hemisphere

rapidly clears in cold, fresh air. Since there the air moves down the slope of the cold
is usually a k air mass behind the cold front rather than up it. Then there exists
front, surface turbulence may produce small, what is known as a katabatic front rather
flattish cumulus of fair weather for some than an anabatlc front, which is the more
distance behind the front-primarily day- typical. On a significant number of occa-
time phenomena that dissipate at nightfall. sions, a katabatic cold front may sweep
Since the warm air generally is moving through an area very quickly without any
away from the cold front and is only being associated weather, the only indications of
underridden because the cold front is mov- a frontal passage being a brief period of
ing faster, no sustained flow of warm air brisk winds and rapidly falling tempera-
continues at high levels above the cold front. tures. In general, the more rapidly moving
In fact, on occasion the upper air, typically a front or a cyclonic system, the weaker
from some westerly direction, may be mov- the vertical development and the less in-
ing faster than the cold front itself, so that tense the weather associated with it.
120 Flow Perturbations in the Middle Latitudes

Figurr 10.4. Vertical cross-section offionts and weather along line AB in Figure 10.3.

Figure 10.3 illustrates that if we are the line AC (Figure 10.3) will pass through
situated at .A and the storm center is moving our position. The wind will gradually shift
in a northeasterly direction, as shown by from southeasterly to northwesterly, but
the heavy arrow. at 30 kilometers per hour, through north. rather than through south
a predictable sequence of events will take as predicted. The temperature will gradually
place. In about I5 hours the sky will become become colder. but there will be no period
overcast and precipitation will begin. Con- of warm weather and no frontal passages.
tinuous precipitation will last for six hours, The sky will remain overcast and precip-
during which the sky will be overcast with itation will occur for about twice as long
stratus clouds. the surface wind will be a period as predicted. The new sequence
southeasterly. and the temperature will be of events is depicted by Figure 10.5. Our
. cool. Then the ~veatherwill change fairly forecast is a complete bust! And the only
abruptly. The overcast will break up. and change was the storm's direction of forward
the clouds will change from stratus to cu- motion, by about 45".
mulus with blue sky in between: the con- This could have been predicted by look-
tinuous rain will be replaced by occasional ing at the upper-air charts and noting that
showers: and the temperature will rise per- the storm path was approaching the crest
ceptibly. with a \vind shift from southeast of a ridge in the upper troposphere (Figure
to southwest. This type of weather will last 10.6). As was explained in Chapter 6, cir-
for five hours while the warm sector of the culation systems in the lower troposphere
storm passes. Next, the wind will become tend to be steered by flow in the upper
very gusty and shift abruptly from south- troposphere. generally following the stand-
west to northwest. Severe thundershowers ing wave patterns in the circun~polarwhirl
will probably occur for an hour or so, from west to east. Figure 10.6 shows that
temperatures will fall precipitously, and successive positions of the center of the
they will plunge even more after the thun- surface low conform closely t o the western
derstorms have passed as clear, cold weather limb of the upper tropospheric ridge. As
-moves in from the west. This sequence of long as the storm is in this portion of the
events is illustrated by the vertical cross- standing wave. it will move along a fairly
section shown in Figure 10.4, which was straight path toward the northeast. But as
taken along the line AB in Figure 10.3. it approaches the crest of the ridge it will
Six hours after the above forecast, a new turn toward the east and, later, toward the
weather map becomes available and shows southeast. This change in direction will
that the storm center has now changed its also cause the storm to weaken, as was
movement from northeasterly to due east. explained in Chapter 6.
Now the portion of the cyclone shown by Waves appear to form on the polar and
i'
e Flow Perturbat~onsin the Middle Latitudes 121
i
10
! WARM AIR
E
N
I E
-
vl

4 W
m x
m-
2 5
0
G w ,
-- ;=
>

C A
360 Kms.
Figure 10.5. Vertical cross-section alorzg line AC in Figure 10.3.

arctic fronts in preferred areas of cyclo- Ob Gulf plays much the same role as the
genesis (birth of cyclones). and resultant Gulf of the St. Lawrence in North America,
cyclones follow preferred paths across the a convergence region of cyclone routes. East
face of the earth. These are shown for the of the Ob. the storms usually die out along
Northern Hemisphere in a very general the Siberian fringes of the Arctic.
way for the two extreme months, January Few cyclonic storms penetrate the deep
and July, in Figures 10.7 and 10.8. interior of Asia. But they form along Far
-~ In North America during winter, pre-
I
Eastern segments of the polar front. usually
ferred areas of cyclogenesis lie just to the off the Plsian mainland south and east of
east of the Rocky Mountains in Alberta or Japan. They swing northeastward into the
Colorado or in east Texas and along the Aleutian Low and then farther eastward
8
i Atlantic Coast, especially north of Cape to penetrate the mountainous western por-
Hatteras inNorth Carolina. wherever they tions of North America.

i
1
originate, their routes eventually converge
on the New England-Maritime Province
area of northeastern United States and
During July tracks are similar but are
generally shifted poleward. and frequencies
of storms along the routes are reduced. In
southeastern Canada, as they move into Europe the Mediterranean route is largely
the North Atlantic to merge with the Ice- abandoned. The Baltic cyclones penetrate
landic Low, which is well developed at that Siberia as a broad, diffuse thermal low
time of year. replaces the thermal high of winter. In the
Farther east, cyclonic storms move out Far East the weakened polar front shifts
of the Icelandic Low eastward and south- westward across the Japanese islands and
eastward to cross Europe in three preferred portions of the mainland, especially along
paths: (a) along the Arctic coast of Scan- the Mongolian-Soviet border, which be-
dinavia and the Soviet Union, (b) up the comes a significant area of cyclogenesis
Baltic to the Arctic coast of the Soviet during mid- and late summer. Cyclones
Union, and (c) through the Mediterranean forming along the Mongolian Front move
Sea after which some continue eastward eastward across the Sea of Okhotsk into
into the Middle East, and some swing the northern Pacific.
northeastward across the Soviet Union to- It can be seen from these generalized
ward the gulf of the Ob River in western maps that cyclones tend to edge their way
Siberia, where they converge with storms poleward and converge in the subpolar low
fbllowing the Arctic and Baltic routes. The areas. Anticyclones (high pressure cells). on
,

122 Flow Perturbations in the Middle Latitudes

usually much more diffuse than the up-


drafts, so the downward motion is not as
noticeable. In its initial stages, each cu-
mulus cell typically is no more than one
kilometer in diameter, if that, while the
space between cells is considerably greater.
As the cumulus cell grows well above
the freezing level in the atmosphere and
individual cloud droplets increase in size,
Figure 10.6. Sinall circles depict successive
positions of surface low relative to wave pat-
the mature stage is reached and precipi-
tern of upper tropospheric flow. tation begins. This usually occurs first on
the leading edge of the storm, according
to its direction of motion. The falling pre-
the other hand, in the higher middle lat- cipitation produces a frictional drag on the
itudes work their way equatorward to join air in that portion of the cloud and also
the subtropical high pressure belt (Figures cools the air significantly, both by contact
10.9 and 10.10). and by partial evaporation of some of the
falling precipitation which extracts the heat
of evaporation from the surrounding air
Thunderstorms and Tornadoes
nlolecules. This results in a strong down-
->
As was demonstrated in Chapter 8, thun- draft in the front edge of the cell. Usually
derstorms may develop if the air is con- the first noticeable characteristic of a thun- . .
ditionally or convectionally unstable. For derstorm's approach is a sudden shift in ... .
,:'*
instability to be triggered, the air must be wind direction. accompanied by a blast of I1
i .
lifted to its level of free convection, either cold air descending from the roll cloud i

by heating at the surface. cyclonic lift over that is boiling along at the base of the
1
j
a front. or orographic lift (over a terrane leading edge of the cell. a short distance , . 1
. .
barrier). Once the level of free convection above the ground. This is known as a "gust
has been reached. vertical movement is front."
perpetuated by the release of latent heat About this time the top of the cloud
of condensation. and vertical cells of cir- becomes glaciated (composed of ice crys-
culation form that are somewhat self-con- tals). and the typical "anvil" forms which
tained thermodynamic mechanisms. These is composed of milky-white cirrus clouds
convective cells produce the commonly ob- made up of ice crystals. This shape. which
served cauliflower-shaped cumulus clouds has been likened to the old-time blacksmith
that may grow rapidly upward until light- anvil. is formed as the upper tropospheric
ning and thunder occur and a full-blown winds extend the glaciated portion of the
thunderstorm develops. cloud tops a long distance downwind un-
Figure 10.11 shows the progressive stages derneath the tropopause inversion.
of the development of a thunderstorm. Ini- Now the cell has reached its advanced
tially, as the cumulus cloud is growing, -the stage, and heavy precipitation throughout
vertical air movement throughout the entire the cloud has produced downdrafts every-
cloud is upward. To satisfy mass continuity, where. This is the stage of heaviest pre-
of course. an equal amount of downward cipitation. but it is also the beginning of
motion must occur somewhere, and this the end, since no more warm, moist air is
takes place around the" ?loud formation. being brought in from below to release its
Thus, cumulus clouds are typically sepa- latent heat to keep the convection going.
rated from each other by clear air where In the course of ten or fifteen minutes the
the downdrafts occur. The downdrafts are bulk of the precipitation falls. and the
Flow Perturbations in the Middle Latitudes 123

Figure 10.7. Cyclone paths in the Northern Hemisphere, January. Solid arrows denote
primary tracks; dashed arrows, secondary ones. (After William H. Klein, Principal Tracks
and Mean Frequencies of Cyclones and Anticyclones in the Northern Hemisphere, U.S.
Weather Bureau, Research Paper No. 40 [Washington, 19571)

convection cell slowly dissipates as other Thunderstorms are by far the most nu-
cells grow around it. The precipitation time- merous of the violent, turbulent storms. It
span and the intensity of the cell may be has been estimated that more than 40,000
greatly enhanced if the convection cell is of them take place on earth every day.
tilted so the precipitation at the leading Since their development depends upon con-
edge does not fall through the updraft in ditionally unstable air and high humidity
the main body of the cell. The most severe content, most are found in association with
thunderstorms often develop a double-vor- maritime tropical (mT) air masses. As can
tex structure, counterclockwise in their be seen in Figure 10.12, thunderstorms
equatorward portlon and clockwise in their occur most frequently in the equatorial
poleward portion. region, particularly on the continent of
124 Flow Perturbations in the Middle Latitudes

Figtrre 10.8. Cyclone paths in the Northern Hemisphere, July. (After Kleirz, Cyclones
and Anticyclones in the Northern Hemisphere.)

Africa. Within the United States they occur hail and occasional tornadoes, are found
most frequently in the Southeast, which is in portions of the middle latitude$ par-
dominated by warm, moist, conditionally ticularly in central United States and north-
unstable air along the western edge of the central India. Such turbulence is usually
North Atlantic High. related to a rapid decrease of absolute
Although tropical and subtropical thun- moisture content with height, which sets
derstorms probably pr6duce the greatest the stage for convective instability, triggered
amounts of precipitation, they are not nec- either by orographic or cyclonic uplift and
essarily the most turbulent. Extremely tur-. strong vertical wind shears.
bulent thunderstorms, attested to by large Individual thunderstorm cells represent
Flow Perturbations in the Middle Latitudes 125

Figure 10.9. Anticyclone paths in the Northern Hemisphere, January. (After Klein,
Cyclones and Anticyclones in the Northern Hemisphere.)

small circulation systems in the atmosphere storm masses consisting of several cells,
that are usually imbedded in broader-scale and occasionally they form lines of almost
systems, such as a cyclonic storm, the continuous thunderstorm cells that move
intertropical convergence zone, or a con- in unison as squall lines.
ditionally unstable k air mass, such as the
maritime tropical air moving from the Gulf
of Mexico into southeastern United States
Squall Lines
during summer. Individually, they cover In central United States squall lines some-
only a few kilometers in diameter at best. times form in warm sectors of cyclonic
but fiequently they coalesce into thunder- storms 50-300 kilometers ahead of cold
126 Flow Perturbations in the Middle Latitudes

Figure 10.10. Anticj>c/onepaths in the Northern Hemisphere, July. (After Klein, Cyclones
and Anticyclones in the Northern Hemisphere.)

fronts (Figure 10.13). Downdrafts in the to north across the Great Plains, particu-
leading edges of thunderstorm cells asso- larly from Texas to Nebraska. Similar oc-
ciated with cold fronts appear to give rise currences are found in east-central Argen-
to small high pressure centers that push tina.
air (cooled by evaporation or precipitation) Squall lines move with about the same
ahead of cold fronts in the form of pseu- speed and direction as the cold fronts be-
dofronts, which underride-warm air ahead hind them, and their approach is often
and trigger instability. Squall lines in this mistaken as the approach of the cold front,
I
region also appear to be related to low- which confuses weather predictions. In some
level jets of moist air blowing from south cases squall lines move faster than the cold
Flow Perturbat~onsin the Middle Lat~tudes 127
I

Figure 10.11. Stages in the development of a thtlnderstorm cell. Left: cumulus or de1,eloping E i
stage. Center: rnature stage. Right: old or dissipating stage.
ti !
; ;

1 fronts behind them and eventually are no


longer directly associated with the cold
much as 225 meters per second (500 mph).
At the surface the air rotating around the
i:I .,
j fronts. One of the most remarkable occur- vortex moves inward toward the center and
rences of squall lines is in west Africa in then upward. carrying with it debris as
the Lake Chad-Niger River area, where large as automobiles and major portions
they become the primary cause of rainfall of houses. Extreme pressure gradients are
during summer. Here they occur in lower produced over short distances. perhaps as
latitudes unassociated with the polar front much as 250-millibars change in a few
and its cyclonic storms. Although they are hundred meters. These add to the destruc-
imbedded at the surface in a southwest tion, since tightly closed buildings may not
monsoonal flow, they move westward with allow air inside to escape fast enough to
I the winds aloft that flow from east to west. equalize the pressure within the building
and the pressure dropping outside with the
passage of the storm. Tornadoes often leave
Tornadoes paths of destruction in urban areas where
Squall lines that form near the apexes of entire blocks of houses appear to have
warm sectors in cyclonic storms provide literally exploded outward, with their roofs
some of the most turbulent weather in lifted off and walls laid out from the centers
I interior North America and on extreme of the buildings.
occasions may spawn tornadoes, the most A typical tornado in the United States
violent of all weather phenomena. The char- moves northeastward with a forward speed
acteristic funnel cloud builds downward of perhaps 20 meters per second (45 mph).
i from low-hanging cumulonimbus clouds as- It frequently skips. with the funnel cloud
, , sociated with severe thunderstorm cells and temporarily receding upward into the base
, ,
forms a very small vortex, typically less of the cumulonimbus cloud and later drop-
than 400 meters in diameter, which pro- ping down again. The fleeting lifespan and
duces extreme wind speeds, perhaps as erratlc movement make it difficult to trace
!
, ,I" 5.- \
,:,

'I!" g i
i '
; 4. :s
, :, /
.
;,
i Flow Perturbations in the Middle Latitudes 129
I
I

the path of any single tornado vortex. Al-


, ', though tornadoes are nearly totally destruc-
tive where they hit, their routes are narrow
and discontinuous, and their appearances
i do not significantly alter average statistics
of winds and other climatic phenomena,'
even in the regions of their most frequent
occurrence. But if they do hit, they are
I
phenomena to be reckoned with. In an
attempt to predict their occurrence and
I
warn people in affected areas, the National
I
Weather Service operates a severe-storm
warning center in Kansas City, Missouri,
!
i with a laboratory near Oklahoma City, near
the center of most frequent tornado oc-
1' currence.
Most of the tornadoes on earth occur
in the United States east of the Rocky
Mountains. Although all states have re-
1
i corded tornadoes, the maximum number
occur in the southern and central Great
Plains, the Midwest, and the southeastern
United States. Outside North America, Aus-
1, tralia experiences tornadoes most fre-
quently, particularly in the southeastern
Figure 10.13. Typical squall line ahead
of cold front in warm sector of cyclone
in central United States.
part of the continent. Only scattered oc-
currences of tornadoes have been reported
in other parts of the world. i take place during the months of April, May,
In central and southern United States and June. Most occur during late afternoon
tornadoes are most likely to develop near and evening during the period of maximum
stalled sections of the polar front during diurnal convective activity. In southeastern
periods of most intense air mass contrasts, United States, particularly along the Gulf
j
which usually occur during spring. In the Coast, multiple small tornadoes are com-
states of maximum occurrence, Oklahoma monly associated with hurricanes during
and Kansas, three-fourths of the tornadoes late summer and autumn.
11 FLOW PERTURBATIONS IN
LOWER LATITUDES

In lower latitudes, because of reduced tem- 400 meters above sea level, while at Hawaii
perature and pressure gradients and re- 4500 kilometers to the southwest, it av-
duced Coriolis Force, the geostrophic wind erages more than 2000 meters above sea
concept breaks down, and the air tends to level. Farther west the inversion disappears
move more and more perpendicular t o the altogether as the air becomes conditionally
-isobars as the equator is approached. As unstable along the western edge of the high.
a consequence. perturbations in the air flow In the equatorward-eastern quadrants of
that may bring about notable weather take the subtropical highs where subsidence is
on different forms than they do in middle strongest and the inversion base is lowest
and higher latitudes. above the surface, the marine layer of air
under the inversion is usually too thin for
convection to produce clouds of significant
The Trade Wind Inversion
vertical development. In these places fog
As mentioned earlier. the air circulating and low overcast stratus clouds are the rule.
around a subtropical high pressure cell If the inversion is very lo\\, above the
undergoes divergence and subsidence. which surface, the marine layer may not be thick
is strongest on the equatorward-eastern edge enough even to produce stratus clouds, as
of the cell. Thus. a strong subsidence in- is often the case in southern California
version is formed not far above the surface during middle and late summer. But as the
along western coasts of continents in sub- inversion lifts westward, convective activity
tropical latitudes, such as southern and within the marine layer typically produces
Baja California, northern Chile and Peru, cumulus clouds that build u p to the base
and northwest and southwest Africa. As of the inversion. These are the well-known
the air turns westward and moves into "trade wind cumulus" that dominate the
progressively lower latitudes along the eastern halves of subtropical ocean areas.
equatonvard margins of these highs, the They are very regular formations when
surface air picks up heat and moisture from viewed from above, such as from the high
the tropical sea, which produces increasing' volcanic peaks on the Big Island of Hawaii,
instability in the marine layer underneath where one can observe them moving in
the inversion and lifts the inversion layer from the northeast, their bases regularly
t o greater and greater heights. For instance, positioned at the condensation level a few
during summer on the west coast of North hundred meters above the surface of the
America near San Francisco, the height of sea, and their tops distinctly limited by
the base of the inversi6fi averages about the base of the inversion, perhaps 2000-2500
Figure 11.1, Trade wind cumulus moving with the northeast trades onto the Big Island of Hawaii
below the summits of Mauna Lou (distance) and Malrna Kea (foreground). Note the barren surface
of the dry summlt of Mauna Kea.
I
132 Flow Perturbations in Lower Latitudes I

meters above the sea (Figure 11.1). From


such cloud formations, intermediate slopes
,
. ,.
, of windward sides of mountains may re- Although pressure gradients and winds are 1 !
,
ceive copious precipitation, upward of 7500 usually weak and relatively unorganized in !

millimeters (300 inches) per year or more, the tropics, occasionally rotary motions are
iI I;
I

while lower and higher slopes remain dry. initiated which, under the influence of a iI !
(
It has been estimated that the top of Mauna weak Coriolis parameter, develop into high ! :
Kea on Hawaii at an elevation of 4206 wind speeds. Since these disturbances orig-
%;;
.,,
:;'
.:'
%,,
meters (13,796 feet) receives no more than
375 millimeters (15 inches) of precipitation
per year because i t is above most of the
clouds. Similar conditions exist at Tenerife
inate in tropical oceanic areas where few
surface observations exist, little is known
about the initiation of the cellular circu-
lations with pronounced low pressure cen-
11' :
.,)

'i! 1
in the Canary Islands off the northwest
coast of Africa.
ters. Satellite photography during the last
couple of decades has helped to locate these
I
storms earlier in their lifesuans. but still
they are not observed until they are fairly i
Easterly Waves
well developed. Some ofthem may originate
Along the equatorward-western edges of as easterly wave perturbations or open wave
the subtropical highs imbedded in the con- formations on the intertropical front, where
ditionally unstable trade winds appear open
wave formations, 2000 kilometers or more
in length. that move westward with the right on
trades at forward speeds averaging about
5 meters per second (11 mph). Therefore,
an entire wave takes four or five days to
pass a position. Although these are very equator aad ~ e ~ e s t w d x i i d e
subtle features in the surface isobaric pat- winds,gr~&&&in&iW)ip&
,

---
tern, which is usually drawn with little ward u n ~ ~ s , ~ , m ~ w n
available data anyway, they do impart an &he w~zki&gs_a&h.eicgr-
aperiodic element to an otherwise. rather lg&&bJigure 11.3 shows typical routes
regular diurnal cycle of weather events in of travel of tropical storms that have de-
the tropics (Figure 11.2). The easterly waves veloped to hurricane strength.
are associated with divergence. subsidence, ~ ~ r i ~s-tehepriw-r& ~ r g y ~
I
and clear skies on their leading edges, fol- the latent he*
m ~ T T h & ~ ~ e ~ /t ~ r - ~
----
lowed by convergence, uplift, and increased de\ielop only over ocean areasu v e j
thunderstorm activity after their wave crests tern-ures
- --.-...
higher than 27°C (80°F).&
---pl
1
pass. Thus. the passing of an entire easterly conve~gingt o w a ~ - a _ J ~ w ~ s s u _ ~ - c ~ e n\ t e ~
wave over a region may result in two to ----. over a warm water surface carries E r s t
three days of less than normal clouds and amounts <<_energy in the form of latent '
- -__1

precipitation, followed by two to three days heat tied u u n the m o i s.t y ~ ~ e t h '
+
.
been ,
of increased thunderstorm activity and pre- . e x w . a a S e d - ~ , ~ m g g ~ o a d . o c e ~ \ i
-
cipitation. The waves show no tendency to c o m t ~ a & d _ i n a small area. Risin- I
i
go through a cycle of occlusion. dissipation, a r ~ u n d . ~ t h e _ c _ ~ ~ f ~ ~ ~ f ~ . e & o oak
the Is !
and regeneration, as' they do in the middle adiabaticalk and releases this energy
latitudes. Little is known-about the origin Slwizug-ss Ii
-
. of condensation. As
and fate of these minor perturbations in ! a i g g . a s - t b m u r e sourcejlnhhenretdne 8 . .
the trade wind flows. e'uegy-source,
---"
is available, the s t o r m -
Flow Perturbat~ons~n Lower Latitudes 133

tinues to develop. But when the s t o r d huge areas. thereby causing widespread
\
leaves the warm ocean s u r f a c ~ e i t h e rb 2 damage from flooding. But local inhabitants
\
moving into
-..-.--.*" ---".
..*-..---. higher latitudes o K r a i are not aware that they are undergoing a
czntinental m ~ , _ 1 : t ~ ~ c k ~ . & ~ s . hurricane t & e ~ \ passage. because the wind speeds
i.-.-
n E:",_d...;.,.-","--l
of new y_: energy,
ly_:
and the w i m h r e no higher than they are with ordinary
,dies
-...----I_ down a ~ $ ~ ~ r n & . t . & , he low i extratropical cyclonic storms common to
e

1
pressure center with its associated wide- the region. In fact. such storms frequently
spread cloudiness and heavy -precipitation 1 join up with extratropical cyclones coming
-mav+
generally
----.---
meters
-move------+
are l ~ m ~ t e
tod within I,
far inland b a t h e strong w>$
---- 30-40 k ~ l o -
across the central United States. which
causes them to deepen and stagnate, thereby
of a seacoast. For instance, in the prolonging their influence over the north-
_;r..-._._I_l_C_
United States a hurricane storm may come eastern states. The amount of precipitation
onto the mainland from the Gulf of Mexico. released in such a situation can be phe-
move u p the Mississippi Valley, curve nomenal. Hurricane Agnes, in June 1972,
northeastward up the Ohio Valley into the dumped about 300 millimeters (one foot)
New York or New England area, and drop of rain over much of eastern Pennsylvania
several hundred millimeters of rain over and adjoining states. causing tremendous
: ,Flow Perturbations in Lower Latitudes 135

amounts of damage from flooding and mud- are known as cyclones, as they commonly
slides. are in Australia. Hence, once again the
In coastal areas, in addition to the high term "cyclone" is used in a different context.
winds, one of the most damaging charac- They are all the-same kind of storm, al-
teristics of a hurricane storm is the surge though usually of different intensities in
of wind-driven ocean water as the storm different areas.
approaches the coast. It is not uncommon These storms are most frequent and most
for the water level to rise more than 6 intense in the western North Pacific, where
meters (20 feet). which, along flat coastal wind speeds of 70-90 meters per second
plains, may drive the water far inland. (150-200 mph) are not uncommon, al-
During the night of 17-18 August 1969, though the majority of them have wind
Hurricane Camille drove a 7-meter tide speeds somewhat less than that. During the
ahead of it across the Louisiana-Mississippi height of their season (July-October) it is
coast and literally drowned the small town not uncommon to find two, or even three,
of Cameron. Louisiana. Such occurrences such storms in different stages of devel-
have been particularly disastrous in the opment following one another across the
densely populated Ganges delta at the head western part ofthe North Pacific. 1500-3000
of the Bay of Bengal. where such storms kilometers apart.
repeatedly have caused hundreds of thou- The second area of most frequent and
sands of deaths by drowning and untold most intense occurrence of these tropical
property damage. The most memorable case. storms is the western part of the North
on 12 November 1970. had an official death Atlantic and adjacent Caribbean Sea and
toll exceeding 200.000 people and, as a Gulf of Mexico. Here wind speeds very
result of its millions of homeless refugees. rarely, perhaps only once in 10 or 20 years,
eventually touched off the Pakistani civil reach 90 meters per second (200 mph).
war that resulted in the establishment of Other regions in descending order of oc-
the new country of Bangladesh. currence are the northern Indian Ocean.
According to official definitions of the particularly the Bay of Bengal, but to some
World Meteorological Organization, closed extent the Arabian Sea: the southern Indian
cyclonic circulations in the tropics with Ocean in its western portion next to Mad-
wind speeds less than 17 meters per second agascar Island off southeastern Africa; the
(38 mph) are tropical depressions. When western South Pacific, particularly to the
the wind speed rises to 17-32 meters per east of Australia, but also all along the
second they are called tropical storms. When northern coast: and the very eastern North
wind speeds reach more than 32 meters Pacific southwest of Mexico, which has
per second (75 mph) they are called some- fewer and usually weaker storms. The out-
thing else, depending on the region. In the standing exception to such locations is the
Caribbean area they are known as hurri- western south Atlantic next to Brazil, which
canes and in the Pacific, generally, as ty- has never experienced hurricane-type storms
phoons, but in different portions of the (see Figure 11.3). The sea-surface temper-. \
Pacific they i r e known by different names. ature there is usually too cool for the
In the Philippines they are known as ba- formation of such storms, and the position
g~rios,after a small resort city that in 1911 and shape of the south American continent
received 1150 millimeters (46 inches) of are such that this coastal area juts well
rain in 24 hours during the passage of such into the central portions of the South At-
a storm. I n the Indian Ocean area, including lantic high pressure cell, so that atmospheric
the Bay of Bengal and the Arabian Sea on stability is generally greater in this area
either side of the Indian peninsula, they than in the others mentioned.
136 Flow Perturbations in Lower Latitudes

In the Northern Pqt $? -


bK --bands of clouds :-and _the bands of
the
/ -
/r

surface t e m p e r a t u r ! d - & s u b s ~ d e n u ~ relat~vely


.- he clear areas in
/ June-November, and these are the months b m . G_$~&-ce appears
i1 _i n which hurricanes develop most fre- a ~ g ~ & j l a _ ~ ~ ~ & g ~ y o f J _ h ~ t . o _ r _ m
j quently, although occasionallv w titularly on its leading e d g u i -..--+,
r ~..u-.ws c h has e-,-x-=-w-.

i i,p adjacent months of the year. In the north p r o m & e E d d -_. adage "the calm
i Indian Ocean, which is consistently warm, the storm.;'~ften d u r ~ n gan' entire day as
-=_A

- . . . . . .
* ; diameter from as small as mkiize&s
a-

.ill:
. ; -*<
,.-. . %
---- . , th_al1~&?2;x$d1ngs---Cr )l-"e,-?m u p to t E tro-
31:; to QQJ~" than 1500 k i l o m g e r ~ n p & ~ g p & popause.
.._..._, --*v.,~,.---.~,~ .--*- the -___.c----~
- Thus -.-.-,-- hurr~cane -I .--.A

.,I.
J.
#:
1
i . n c ~ a g .from the s r i ~ h ~ x u ~ - h _ g
center
to less--"
_I-____l-

-..-,"=-L-.~ where =+-.


core c y z n e and must
.I.-

sea-level pressure
than 900 millibas, The lowest sea-
_____l_d"^--i-
--*.
-as - n-l
A
decrease
---. ."---

. - -
in intensity
--_-x

with he%,
...i.l-ll..."w.-_
t~cyclonealoft.
-
_
eventually
-..^--. b e c o m i n e n a?
"-^- n-m--.-- --_
level pressures ever recorded are in the
centers of such storms. (Pressure may reach
even lower levels in the centers of tornadoes,
Equatorial Westerlies
but no measurements or adequate estimates Between the trade winds. a belt of surface
have been possible in those cases.) The westerly winds is often found near the
official world's lowest sea-level air pressure equator, especially in the summer hemi-
was recorded in the eye of Typhoon June sphere. The most extensi\-e zone stretches
in the western North Pacific in November from just west of Africa eastward into the
1975, where the central pressure dropped western Pacific. A limited zone intersects
to 25.90 inches (876 mb). the equatorial west coast of south America.
In the immediate -.--_--.center of the storm.- Here and in equatorial western .Africa, west-
._-* -_-_
the wind dles
L"_".
down. anddJ2,- erly winds prevail throughout the year. But
atlvely calm
_I_.----." .-.- -.--..--"
a n m n what is known in eastern Africa, southeast Asia. and north-
as
.-----*. the -- eye o r t h e storm. 1t-ous
---llC'--------
there 1s in E e center of the hurricane a,
that ern Australia, they shift latitudes widely
with the seasons. Their most poleward ex-
_ . . -.-..-"
"

chimnev of _-., descending-air that produces tent is found during the Northern Hemi-
subsidence . .__I___._ and relatively clear weather, ac- sphere summer in northwestern India-Pa-
co,m~anied ll_.l__ ...by.-_-*_ _
only light-,__ ___ This mav
winds. kistan, where they sometimes penetrate t o
cover a circular _,-.
area approximately 15-45
--.".--___._ 30"N latitude as the Indian monsoon. Over
k71"dmers
~ . - - . - _ ~ ~ ~m n, c t i v wall
In diameter. .----_FI
e the Indian Ocean they often extend upward
of clouds
-._.-.---"-._l_~ surrounds this sa_:inhis to 5-6 kilometers, but in the rest of the
".portion . l l of~ .the. - storm . - - - the
- ~greatest
~ 7 uplift, world they tepd to be shallower. Over Africa
. k x g ~ twlnd speeds. w- they generally extend only to 2-3 kilometers
--.cipitation occur. height. The westerlies have a meridional
Around the eye wall the clouds arranjqe component directed poleward and tend to
as shown in be more unstable than the tropical easterlies
the 11.4. T_'rpugh- with equatorward components. The west-
out much of the storm there s
,.._.-~-.-.-"","___ m erlies usually bring heavy rainfall to areas
. ~.
alternating
. .. ..... - ---a.r.- ips- consistently affected by them. particularly
~....-.- the bands -Lift
sidence. - being marked along mountainous windward coasts. such
Flow Perturbations in Lower Latitudes 137

Figure 11.4. Salellite photo of Hurricarze Allen in the western G~r!fof Mexico, 8 Allgiisf
1980. Nore tile spiral cioird barzds and the eye.

as the mid-section of the western coast of To some extent it also affects much of Indo-
Colombia in South America. portions of nesia, where it extends south of the equator
the Guinea-Cameroon coast of Africa, and into northern Australia. Discussion here will
the West Ghats and Khasi Hills of India. be confined to its most classic development
over the Indian subcontinent and adjacent
water bodies-the Arabian Sea to the west
The Southeast Asian Monsoon and the Bay of Bengal to the east.
One of the 11iost outstanding features of Here, particularly, its specific features
the air flow in low latitudes is the great appear to be due to much more than just
seasonal reversal of winds and resultant the seasonal reversal of land-sea heating
weather that occurs throughout much of differentials. The suddenness of the "burst"
the north Indian Ocean. India. the countries of the rainy period during early June in
of southeastern Asia. much of China, and southwestern India, the deflection of the
parts of adjacent countries. as well as the southwest surface winds at the head of the
western fringes of the North Pacific Ocean. Bay of Bengal to southeasterlies up the
138 Flow Perturbations in Lower Latitudes

Ganges Valley, a n d the progression of insolation-absorbing surface. Much heat en- \


"monsoon depressions" from the Bay of ergy is also injected into the upper tropo- j
Bengal northwestward across India are some
of the features imbedded in the general
summer monsoon environment that cannot
sphere along the southeastern fringes of
Tibet by the release of latent heat from
copious precipitation occurring along the
II
be explained by simple land-sea tempera- southern mountain slopes in northeastern I
I
ture differences. India at this time of year. The warm air
The highlands to the north appear to temperatures create a thermal high above
play a major role. The massive Tibet Pla- the highlands which, rotating clockwise,
teau, ranging in average elevation from brings on the formation of an easterly jet
approximately 4000 meters in its eastern along its southern flank.
portions to 6000 meters in its western The easterly air flow aloft over India
portions, with still-higher surmounting and deflects the southwesterly surface winds at
surrounding mountain ranges, pokes well
into the upper troposphere to split the
westerly air streams of the east Asian re-
the head of the Bay of Bengal and causes
the surface air to proceed up the Ganges
Valley from southeast to northwest. It also
I
\

gion. During winter two jet streams occupy guides the ionsoo soon depressions," weak
positions to the south and north of this enclosed lows originating in the Bay of
highland mass. The southerly one down Bengal area, northwestward across India.
the Ganges Valley of northern India is by What appears to be a segment of the
far the stronger of the two. But in spring intertropical front becomes positioned far
it begins to weaken, and by late May or north during the s u m ~ l i e r i nthe Ganges-
early June it disappears altogether or flops Indus Plain of northern India-Pakistan. But
over the highlands to join the jet on the in the I n d ~ ~Valley
s it does not bring on
northern side. This event allows for the precipitation. The extreme dryness of tb-
i
"burst" of the summer monsoon rains over Thar Desert in this region and the rap._
!
much of peninsular India. associated with decrease of precipitation northward along
southwesterly airflow at the surface. the west coast of peninsular India are ap-
.An easterly jet then develops near the parently explained by the abnormal slope
150-millibar level in the upper troposphere of the frontal surface in this region-up-
which. during summer. is centered at about ward to the south-as the hot desert air
l j 0 N latitude and spreads from central from the north overrides the less hot marine
India eastward and westward to eventually
occupy an extensive area all the way from
the western Pacific westward through the
air from the south off the Arabian Sea.
The frontal surface acts as a lid and limits
cumulus buildup in the marine air under-
i
northern portions of the Indian Ocean. the
southwestern tip of Arabia. and across north
neath. Only when the marine layer becomes
thick enough, far south of the surface front,
i
I
I
Africa to the eastern Atlantic Ocean. This
appears to stem. partially at least, from
the formation of a thermal high pressure
do showers commence, usually off the coast
well to the south of Pakistan.
During winter the surface air generally
11
cell in the mid- and upper troposphere over flows from northeast to southwest across , -

Tibet and surrounding highlands. This up- much of India. The westerly jet becomes
land surface absorbs much heat from the reestablished over the Ganges Plain and 1
strong insolation coming through the thin, brings in some weak surface lows from the
clear air at this altitude. which produces Middle East, which produce small but crit-
temperatures in the air a'b'ove the highlands ically beneficial amounts of rain to Pakistan
much warmer than they would be at similar and northwestern India upon which the
altitudes in the free atmosphere without an winter wheat of this area depends.
12 1 WIND

In this chapter wind will be considered as quently. But if the winds are variable, the
a climatic element. as it influences objects prevailing wind might not be particularly
at the earth's surface. It is usually perceived representative. since it might blow less than
as a significant climatic element only when the majority of the time. Figures 6.2 and
it is persistent enough or strong enough to 6.3 illustrate prevailing winds of the world
be annoying or damaging. or distinctive by directions of arrows. The widths of the
enough to be a characteristic part of the arrows indicate percentages of all time that
climate of an area. the winds blow from the prevailing direc-
tions and thus show how prevailing the
prevailing winds are. It is immediately.
Climatic Representation of
obvious from these maps that the winds
Winds are most consistent in direction in the trade
,, ,,,
, . Althoug11.surface winds are measured fairly wind belts on either side of the meteoro-
accurately and consistently every hour, as logical equator, and probably least consis-
are precipitation and temperature, the wind tent over land masses in middle latitudes.
is more difficult to deal with statistically These maps indicate nothing about wind
since it is a vector consisting of two com- speeds, which could be depicted by varying
ponents. direction and speed. The most the lengths of arrows. More commonly.
complete way to depict winds at a place direction, constancy, and speed are depicted
over a period of time is in devices such by varying direction, length, and width of
as frequency tables or wind roses, showing arrows, respectively.
the percentage of all time when the wind
blows from each direction of a 16-point
compass. These usually represent only di-
Resultant Wind
rection, although average speed from each Perhaps more representative of the total
direction can be added. In any case, such air movement at a given point is the so-
representations are bulky and difficult to called "resultant" wind. This is the vector
compare among different stations. addition of all the winds at a given point
over a period of time, such as a month,
for which the winds are being depicted.
Prevailing Wind
Theoretically, this represents the net move-
One of the easiest climatic expressions of ment of air during the period. Resultant
wind is the so-called "prevailing" wind winds can be determined graphically by
that represents all winds at a point by the connecting heads and tails of arrows whose
, , direction from which they blow most fre- directions and lengths represent the direc-
14U Wind

tions and speeds of individual wind ob-


servations. Or resultant winds can be de-
Characteristic Wind 1
rived statistically by dividingeach observed In some areas, occasional characteristic
wind direction and speed into north-south winds, while too infrequent to alter pre-
and east-west components, averaging all vailing or resultant wind determinations,
these components, and then recombining may nevertheless have profound effects on
them into a resultant wind vector. the inhabitants of the regions. Examples
As mentioned, the resultant wind the- are the foehn winds of southern California
oretically represents the net motion of air and many other mountainous areas of the
across the point over a period of time. world, which blow only occasionally but
Consequently, it might not represent any can bring on the highest temperatures, low-
wind that blows, and in a region of variable est humidities, clearest skies, and greatest
winds might significantly underrepresent fire hazards of the year. Other examples
the windiness of the area. To take an over- are extreme winds associated with occa-
simplified case as an example, if the wind sional storms. such as tornadoes and hur-
in a mountain valley is confined to blowing ricanes, which have already been discussed
either up or down the valley and does both in Chapters 10 and 11. These phenomena
with equal frequency and equal speed, the have such profound effects that, although
resultant wind is zero. Yet calm conditions often too infrequent to alter significantly
may never occur in the valley, and in fact long-term averages of wind directions or
rather strong winds might be experienced speeds, they must be taken into account in
much of the time. the climate of a region. Thus. in a full
Where winds blow equally frequently climatic description of an area one must
from opposite directions, a prevailing wind include the characteristic winds determined
cannot be designated, either. In such cases, by inspection of day-to-day records rather
as far as influences of the wind on surface than long-term a\,erages.
objects are concerned. it might be more
useful simply to average wind speeds arid
forget about directions. Wind direction is
Local Winds 1 i
!
very significant for weather analysis and Characteristic of many areas are local winds
forecasting, but perhaps wind speed is more imposed upon the general circulation by
significant as far as effects on external ob- topographic influences. hlost common are
jects are concerned. sea and land breezes. mountain and valley
Resultant wind arrows have been utilized breezes. foehns, bora, and katabatic winds.
in so-called streaif?lii~e Individual
ai~alj~ses.
arrows computed for resultant winds are 1
connected by smoothly curved lines that
Sea-Land Breezes I
I

theoretically depict net air flow over broad Sea and land breezes tend to set up in a ~
I
parts of the earth's surface and clearly diurnal regime along the coast of any lllajor
reveal lines and vortices of convergence water body because of different temperature II
and divergence, as shown in Figures 6.8 reactions to heat inputs and losses. During I
and 6.9. S-ach streamlines do not relate daylight hours the air over land warms I
directly to either constancy of direction or more rapidly than over adjacent water and 1
I
speed of the winds. In mountainous areas eventually becomes warmer and lighter than
it is unrealistic to draw streamlines that the air over the sea. A vertical circulation 1
.-
ignore details of the topography. cell is set up, with sea air moving inland
at the surface and land air moving seaward
aloft. This so-called "sea breeze" will usu-
'I
Wind 141

ally begin blowing inland late in the morn- ice. Even though the Arctic Ocean is frozen
ing and continue through the afternoon. over right up to the coast during winter,
Such breezes may become particularly considerable heat is conducted upward from
strong, 10 meters per second (22 mph) or the unfrozen subsurface water through the
more, along coasts paralleled by cold ocean approximately three-meter-thick surface ice
currents, such as the coast of southern to maintain surface air temperatures around
California or the Peruvian coast of South -35"C, which is usually 10 to 15 degrees
America. In such areas they may penetrate warmer than over the Siberian landmass
30 or more kilometers inland and in some to the south. During summer, winds blow
cases considerably more, if the inland to- from north to south from the relatively
pography contributes to them. At night the cold fringes of the Arctic seas onto the
land cools more rapidly than the sea, and warmer landmass. Ice floes keep water tem-
after midnight the air over the land becomes peratures only three or four degrees above
colder than that over the sea, so a surface freezing during summer, while surface air
land breeze is set up. This is usually less temperatures over the land average 10"-15°C.
well developed than the sea breeze during
the day.
Mountain-Valley Breezes
Along subtropical coasts paralleled by
cool ocean currents, the land-sea breeze In mountainous topography, diurnal re-
regime may be a diurnal occurrence prac- gimes of wind may be set up (much as
tically every day of the year and become they are along coasts) by the differential
the dominant wind feature in the immediate heating between \-alley floors and mountain
shore area. On other ocean coasts-it may slopes. During the day, convection currents
occur only occasionally, when the general from heated valley floors move up mountain
circulation over the area is weak. Large slopes in the form of valley breezes. During
lakes, such as the Great Lakes of North the night, upper slopes of mountains cool
America, may also cause diurnal regimes, rapidly due to radiational heat loss through
but they are usually much less pronounced thin air, and the cooled air moves down-
and penetrate no more than a few kilometers slope under the force of gravity to settle
inland. into valley floors as mountain breezes.
Mountain breezes at night are generally the
best developed of this regime, and they
Monsoons
may become quite brisk if funneled through
In many coastal areas of the world, land- constricted areas such as mouths of can-
sea exchanges of air may be set up on a yons.
seasonal basis. Such seasonal reversals of Where mountainous topography a n d
winds are known as monsoons. By far the coastlines are in juxtaposition, the two
best known are the monsoons of south- regimes can combine to pull sea air far
eastern Asia, but as was mentioned in inland during the day. This is particularly
Chapter 11, the seasonal reversal of air flow conspicuous in areas such as southern Cal-
there is due to more than just seasonal ifornia, where air that has crossed the Pa-
reversals in the heating of land and sea. cific Coast at Santa Monica in the morning
Conforming more closely to a seasonal may be found in the afternoon at Palm
reversal of wind caused by land-sea tem- Springs, 130 kilometers (80 miles) inland.
perature differences is the Arctic coast of Pollution control agencies in southern Cal-
Siberia. During winter, cold winds blow ifornia, tracing the movement of individual
from south to north off the cold land toward particles injected into the air, have found
the relatively warmer air over the Arctic that this much movement does indeed occur
142 Wind

during the day. Of course, by the time it Asia have a saying that "One day of foehn
has reached Palm Springs the air has is worth two weeks of sunshine." O n the
warmed to as much as 40°C (104°F) or other hand, foehns may induce rapid thaw-
more, and therefore has lost the charac- ing of snow and disastrous avalanches in
teristic of a sea breeze. mountainous regions, such as the Alps and
-
Caucasus. In some regions effects are so
Foehns and Boras spectacular that foehns are given special
names, such as the "Santa Ana" of southern
In mountainous areas, other types of local California and the "Chinook" of the north-
winds may occur that are related to the ern Great Plains along the eastern foothills
general circulation over the region rather of the Rocky Mountains.
than to local heating differences. Such are If the descending air originally is much
foehn and bora winds-downslope winds colder at the tops of the mountains than
on lee sides of mountains that are crossed the air normally is at the bases of lee sides,
by the general circulation of air over the the air may arrive at low elevations colder
region. These descending air flows warm than the normal temperatures, even though
adiabatically at the rate of 10°C per kilo- the air has warmed adiabatically during its
meter (5.j0F per thousand feet). If the air descent. Such is the case during winter
is not too cold to begin with, it arrives atwhen cold air builds up over the Swiss
the base of mountains as hot, exceedingly Plateau of Europe and then descends the
dry, clear air that can increase surface southern slopes of the .Alps through several
temperatures as much as 15" or 20°C in a structural valleys. It frequently arrives on
few minutes and drop the relative humidity the Mediterranean and Adriatic coasts of
to 10 percent or less. thus creating extremeFrance, Italy. and Yugoslavia as relatively
fire hazards. Temperatures are warmer than cold winds with speeds as high as 20-30
they were at the same elevations on the meters per second (45-70 mph). This is
windward slopes because latent heat of very disturbing to vacationers along the
condensation was added as the air dropped Riviera at this time of year. Such winds
precipitation as it surmounted the wind- have been termed "bora" winds. a term
ward slopes. derived from the region around the head
If the air is funneled through constric-of the Adriatic Sea. In some areas such
tions such as canyons, these winds can winds are known by local names, such as
reach velocities of as much as 45 meters the "mistral" in southern France.
per second (100 mph) or more. but in open
areas the air flow is generally mild, and
the increase in temperature and drop in
Katabatic Winds
relative humidity are the most discernible Another kind of descending wind is the
characteristics. Such conditions are known katabatic wind, which is caused simply by
as "foehn" winds, a German term meaning the force of gravity. cold air descending
a fall or descending wind down a mountain under its own weight. This is common in
slope. Foehn winds occur in many moun- areas such as the fringes of the Antarctic
tainous areas of the world. sometimes on and G-~eenlandice caps. where cold air
a seasonal basis if the general circulation from the high ice plateaus constantly slides
of air has a seasonal character. During downslope to the sea. These winds are
winter they can be very beneficial because typically gusty, since after they flow for a
they can cause snow covers to evaporate short while the cold air on the uplands
(sublime). thus keeping'pastures open for becomes exhausted. After it rebuilds, more
grazing. The nomadic herders of Central air slides down again. Therefore, in the
I fringes of these ice caps extreme blizzard
~. Wind 143

There it has averaged 77 meters per second


conditions may occur where first the wind (173 mph) for one hour's duration and 58
is relatively calm and then suddenly may meters per second (129 mph) during an
blow with a speed of 25 meters per second entire day. Over the course of the year the
or more, often changing direction abruptly. wind there averages 16 meters per second
(35 mph). This is somewhat less than an
annual average of 19 meters per second
Extreme Wind Speeds
(43 mph) at Cape Denison along the fringe
Since heat and easterly momentum must ofAntarctica. During July 1913, winds there
be transferred from low latitudes to high averaged 25 meters per second (55 mph)
latitudes with greatest flux through the mid- over the entire month. Such winds and low
dle latitudes, the atmospheric circulation temperatures produce extreme wind chills.
by necessity is generally most vigorous in The Soviets have estimated wind chill
the middle latitudes. Thus. average wind equivalent temperatures as low as - 150°C
speeds are generally higher in the middle along the Arctic coast of eastern Siberia
latitudes than at either low or high latitudes. during winter, when strong land breezes
Of course, there are exceptions under cer- are the rule.
tain conditions, such as the large temper- Surface features. primarily vegetation or
ature contrasts between land and sea along the lack thereof, greatly influence average
some high-latitudes coasts or on occasions wind conditions. Dry lands with meager
when significant pressure gradients occur vegetation and high surface temperatures
in lower latitudes. Remember that the Cori- are conducive to constant winds which,
olis Force is very weak in low latitudes. although they may not be extreme in speed,
and therefore even a weak pressure gradient are often so persistent as to become ex-
-
can cause excessive w~nds.such as those hausting. Similar conditions prevail over
found in hurricanes. The highest wind tundra vegetation in the treeless fringes of
speeds on earth are found in tornadoes, the Arctic and mountains above the tree
which are largely middle-latitude phenom- line. In many of these areas the convective
ena, primarily in the United States east of activity is strong during daylight hours,
the Rocky Mountains. Here it has been and there is often a diurnal regime to wind
estimated that speeds as high as 225 meters speeds. They are strongest during the af-
per second (500 mph) may occur, although ternoon when convecti\-e activity has
no one has stood there with a three-cup reached its greatest vertical extent and mixes
anemometer and measured them. higher-speed winds from above downward
T h e highest measured surface wind into the friction layer next to the earth.
speeds on earth have been recorded at an The speeds often die down rapidly as sunset
elevation of 1917 meters (6,288 feet) on approaches and convection ceases, and may
the top of Mount Washington in New be quite calm through much of the night,
Hampshire, where the wind has reached a when the surface air becomes stratified.
speed of 103 meters per second (231 mph).
13 FORMS AND DISTRIBUTIONS OF
CONDENSATION AND PRECIPITATION

Condensation
such as the surface of the earth and objects
The process of condensation that changes on it. If the air's temperature is cooled
water from vapor to liquid renders the below the dew point, some visible form of
water visible. Water in gaseous form (vapor) condensation will occur. Such cooling is
is not visible; therefore, clouds or fog in- usually accomplished by either oftwo meth-
dicate that water in liquid droplet form is ods: (a) radiational heat loss from the earth's
suspended in the air. Condensation can be surface at night or (b) advection (horizontal
brought about either by cooling the air movement) of air over a colder surface.
below its dew point, as was discussed in
Chapter 7, or by injecting moisture into it
to cause supersaturation. In the majority
Dew and Frost I !
!
I
:
of cases, condensation is brought about by Dew and frost almost always are the result
i
cooling the air temperature. of radiational heat loss from ,the earth's j
Condensation is a fairly automatic pro- surface at night. For maximum heat loss
cess once the air becomes saturated with to occur to assure the decrease of surface
water vapor. that is, once the relative hu- air temperature to below the dew point,
midity reaches 100 percent. Although in skies should be clear and the surface air
theory supersaturation may result to several relatively calm. If clouds exist, they will
hundred percent relative humidity, in very probably absorb most of the terrestrial
calm, clean air free of condensation nuclei, radiation and reradiate it back to earth, so
in nature this really does not occur. The the surface air temperature will not reach
air contains so many hygroscopic (water- the dew point during the night. And if
attracting) particles (such as sea salt, smoke, there is too much mixing of the surface
and dust) that condensation is usually guar- air, the cooling of air in contact with the
anteed at about 100 percent relative hu- colder earth's surface will bemixed upward
midity. In fact, in very dirty air conden- through too thick a layer of air for any
sation may begin when the relative humidity portion of it to be cooled below its dew ,
is no more than 90 percent. point. On the other hand, the radiational
Air can be cooled either by diabatic heat loss from the earth's surface on calm,
processes at its base or by adiabatic pro- clear nights will be great, and the cooling
cesses through lifting, as was discussed in of the air in contact with the earth's surface 1
Chapter 8. Through diabatic processes heat will be limited to a thin layer. Under such
is lost by the air to its external environment, conditions a surface air temperature in-
. I
Forms and ~istributionsof Condensation and Precipitation 145

version may be established, and dew or fog is due to the cooling of the surface
frost may form on surface objects. temperature below the dew point, either
Whether dew or frost forms depends through radiational heat loss or through
upon the relationship between the dew the advection of Moist air over a cooler
point temperature and the freezing tem- surface. Radiation fog is usually thin and
perature. If the dew point is below freezing, spotty, commonly occurring only in the
the vapor in the air will change directly lowest topographic depressions. It typically
to tiny ice crystals without going through dissipates shortly after sunrise after inso-
the liquid state. Since the ice crystals have &ion once again raises the temperature of
much air trapped within them. the frost the surface air above the dew point. Ad-
takes on a very whitish, fluffy appearance. vection fog, on the other hand, is usually
This is known as hoar (white) frost. Of widespread over large continuous areas,
course, if the dew point is a little above thick, and persistent. Since it does not
freezing, the cooling during the night may depend upon radiational heating and cool-
reduce the air temperature, first. to below ing, it does not show a diurnal regime, but
the dew point, which causes dew to form, persists as long as the surface air is advected
and then further to below the freezing point, over a cooler surface. This is very prevalent
which freezes the water that has collected in some coastal areas, particularly those
on plants and other objects. This is known paralleled by cool ocean currents, such as
as black frost and is generally more dam- many of the subtropical weslern coasts of
aging to plants than hoar frost. the world. In these areas fog occurs most
Since air cooled by radiational heat loss frequently in summer, when the temper-
tends to settle into the lowest parts of the atures of the oceans are coolest relative to
topography. dew and frost are found most those of adjacent land.
frequently in low portions of the landscape. Advection may also be a factor in the
Since net radiational losses generally occur formation of two other types of fog: upslope
only at night, dew and frost are usually fog and warm front fog. When surface winds
quickly evaporated after the sun comes up blow persistently up mountain slopes or
the next morning. up a gradual incline, as they do when they
move northwestward from the Gulf Coast
of the United States into the western Great
Plains of eastern Colorado and Wyoming,
If many of the condensed water droplets adiabatic cooling can reduce the temper-
remain suspended in the air, visibility will ature below the dew point and clouds can
be impaired by fog. This will require enough form that are still on the ground, hence
mixing of the surface air to keep the water fog. Thus, windward slopes of mountain
droplets suspended. But if mixing is too ranges often record high frequencies of fog.
great, the surface cooling will be spread Thick, persistent fog is often associated
through too thick a layer for the surface with leading edges of warm fronts in cy-
air to be cooled below the dew point. clonic storms. Warm, moist air rising over
Therefore, fog formation, particularly that colder air produces a vapor pressure gra-
due to cooling by radiational heat loss at dient directed downward from the moister
night, places very stringent requirements air above. Since the actual vapor pressure
on atmospheric motion. Because of such ofthe warm air is higher than the saturation
strictly limited criteria for fog formation, vapor pressure of the colder air below,
it is difficult to forecast. moisture will move downward even though
Fog is categorized according to the the lower air may be saturated. This su-
method by which it was produced. Most persaturates the cool surface air and some
146 Forms and Distributions of Condensation and Precipitation

of the moisture condenses into liquid water fog." With extreme water-air temperature
droplets to produce fog. Also, some of the differences, this sort of fog may take on
moisture in the warm upper air may be the appearance of low cumulus clouds based
mixed downward into the cool air, and near the surface and extending a hundred
some may fall as rain droplets into the cool meters or more into the air. Under such
air below. All these processes combine to conditions major water bodies can be dis-
produce a very dense, persistent fog that cerned from a distance by lines of menacing
is often mistaken as simple advection fog low clouds in an otherwise crystal-clear
in such areas as the Great Lakes region of sky. In sparsely populated regions such as
North America, when warm, moist air is much of Canada and Siberia, most of the
being advected northward from the Gulf settlements are found in river valleys and
of Mexico into a cyclonic system. Such fog along lake shores, so climatic records there
is usually strictly demarcated along the often show unusually high fog frequencies
warm frontal surface, however; it is found in these areas during autumn and early
in the cool air underneath the warm front, winter. But these conditions do not pertain
but not in the warm surface air equatorward in uplands between streams.
from the front's surface position. If the Since fog often is fleeting in existence
front becomes stationary, the fog may hang and scattered in distribution, it is difficult
in a certain belt for many hours or even to represent accurately on a world scale,
days, and then suddenly clear within a few particularly over land where more of the
minutes as the front pushes on again. Al- fog is due to radiational cooling. Never-
though advection is a necessary part of its theless, some general patterns can be dis-
formation, in order to bring the moist air cerned. Outstanding in fog occurrence are
over the frontal surface, the fog itself is the subpolar seas along the fringes of the
produced not by the surface cooling of the Arctic and Antarctica, especially during
warm air, but by supersaturation of the summer when open water fringes the ice
cool air underneath the front by the down- caps and causes large temperature differ-
ward injection of water vapor. entials. Fog is also relatively common along
Fog may also be formed by the injection certain subtropical and middle-latitude
of more water vapor into almost-saturated coastal areas paralleled by cold ocean cur-
air when cold air is advected across a rents. And a great deal of northwestern
relatively warmer water surface. In middle Europe experiences persistent advection and
latitudes this is a frequent occurrence over frontal fogs during winter, as warm moist
lakes and rivers during early winter, before air from the Gulf Stream and its extension,
the water surfaces freeze. Because the vapor the North Atlantic Drift, moves eastward
pressure of the water surface is greater than from the Atlantic over the continental land-
the saturation vapor pressure of the cold mass.
air above, moisture moves upward from
the water surface into the air, even though
the air might already be saturated. Almost
Clouds
immediately above the water surface, the Although cooling at the surface can reduce
water vapor will recondense into liquid the air below the dewpoint to form dew,
water droplets and form fog. Since heat is frost, or fog, in such cases only a thin layer
also being added to the lower air, active of surface air is cooled below the dew point
turbulence will mix the water droplets up- and, hence, the total amount of conden-
ward into the air. Untlkr such conditions sation is limited. The only way a thick
it appears that steam is "boiling up" from layer of air can be cooled enough to cause
the water's surface, hence the name "steam precipitation is by adiabatic lifting and
Forms and ~isiributionsof Condensation and Precipitation 147

cooling, as was illustrated briefly in Chapter the freezing level in the atmosphere, and
8. No matter how dry the surface air, if it the top of the cloud has become glaciated
can be lifted high enough, its temperature and takes on an anvil form, as was de-
will eventually be reduced below the dew scribed in Chap& 10. Nimbostratus clouds
point and the condensation level in the are featureless dark gray clouds that usually
atmosphere will be reached. Once this has produce continuous precipitation over
happened, the liquid water droplets will widespread areas, often associated with
become visible as clouds. Lifting may be warm or occluded fronts. Weather services
accompli&ed either by the wind blowing generally recognize about 30 cloud types,
up a terrain barrier, such as a mountain but they are all combinations of stratus,
slope (orographic lifting), by advection up cumulus, and cirrus forms and their com-
a frontal slope (cyclonic lifting), or by tur- binations with nimbus and height desig-
bulent air currents set up by heating at the nations.
earth's surface (convective lifting). Clouds are the visible portion of the sky
Forms. The form the clouds take is dictated and lend much of the character to day-to-
primarily by the stability characteristics of day weather. An understanding of their
the rising air. If the air is stable, clouds forms relative to the processes that produce
will form if the air is forced to rise up a them allows for a considerable understand-
mountain or frontal slope above its con- ing of the synoptic situation over a general
densation level; these clouds will be stra- area and perhaps some fairly accurate short-
tiform, featureless layered clouds that ex- range forecasting, even without access to
tend upward only as high as the air is weather reports from surrounding areas.
forced to rise by some external force. If Clouds are very important climatically, since
the air becomes unstable upon lifting, large they greatly affect radiational exchanges
vertical air currents will develop cumuli- between space and the earth's surface. Their
form clouds with large vertical extent and tops are highly reflective to sunlight, having
billowing shapes. albedos comparable to that of fresh snow.
Stratus and cumulus are the two basic Their water droplets are effective absorbers
forms of clouds that produce precipitation. of heat energy, particularly the long wave
A third form, cirrus, are thin, wispy, high radiation from the earth's surface. And they
clouds composed mostly of ice crystals, but are very effective radiators of long-wave
these do not cause precipitation. Since cir- radiation. Most of the heat radiated from
rus often mark the leading edges of cyclonic the earth-atmosphere system to space is
systems, they may be the harbingers of radiated from cloud tops. And the amount
approaching storms, but long before pre- of cloudiness seems to affect people psy-
cipitation comm&nces the clouds will have chologically: changeability seems to be more
lowered and thickened into stratus or cu- stimulating than either prolonged, dreary
mulus types. overcast or searing desert sun.
A fourth term that is applied to clouds Distribution. On the average, the subpolar
is "nimbus." Nimbus does not refer to a low pressure areas have the greatest amounts
particular form, but indicates only that the of cloud cover and the subtropical high
cloud is precipitating. The term is never pressure cells, the least. Clouds in these
used alone, but always in combination with zones vary some in amount and shift lat-
one of the three terms indicating form. itudinally with seasons (Figures 13.1 to
Hence, a cumulonimbus cloud is a cumulus 13.4). They also vary somewhat from day
cloud that has grown large enough to cause to day according to synoptic situations, but
precipitation to occur. By this time, the not nearly as much as in other portions of
cloud has usually grown upward beyond the earth where circulation systems are less
148 Forms and Dlstrlbut~onsof Condensation and Precipitat~on

:r:. , ;. Figure 13.1. Relative cloud corel; A'orthertz Hemisphere, Decei?lber-Febrz~ary. (Froin
;fill I Global .Atlas of Relative Cloud Cover, 1967-70 [U.S. Departnzmt of Cornr~ierce,Wash-
ingtot~.19711.)

consistent. Other gross features of cloud northeast monsoon at this time of year.
cover and their seasonal variations can be Another conspicuous seasonal reversal takes
discerned even on these small maps. Such place over the Mediterranean Sea, which
are the monsoonal effects on cloud cover area appears quite clear during summer
over India and southeast Asia. Widespread but is relatively cloudy during winter, al-
cloudiness results from the southwest mon- though it is still less cloudy than Europe
soon during summer. There is much less to the north or Africa to the south. In the
cloudiness during wintey,. although there is Southern Hemisphere, conspicuous stratus
some intense cloud formation along the cloud decks form off the coasts of Peru
east coast of Vietnam, and to a lesser extent and northern Chile and off southwest Africa
, '
along southeastern India, derived from the during winter (June-August), but are not
Forms and ~istributionsof Condensation and Precipitation 149

Figure 13.2. Relairre cloud coizer, Southern Henlisphere, December-Febr~iarli;.(Frorn


Global Atlas of Relative Cloud Cover.)

as conspicuous during summer (Decem- and persist endlessly over time with very
ber-February), when cumulus clouds tend few breaks. This dreary type of weather is
to build up over the adjacent land. so prevalent in northern European Russia
It must be borne in mind that these that the Russians have a special term for
polar projections of cloud cover are com- it-pasri~z~i~r~o-which means dull. dreary
posites of data derived from satellite sen- weather. Likewise, the cloud decks that form
sors over a period of four years, and rep- under subsidence inversions over the cool
resent only the amount of sky covered by ocean currents off western South America,
clouds, not the cloud type or thickness. In southwest Africa, and other similar coastal
general, the clouds in subpolar areas are areas are stratiform, with thicknesses gen-
stratiform that d o not extend to great heights. erally of no more than a few hundred
They usually result in overcast conditions meters. It is difficult to compare thc cl~matic
150 Forms and Distributions of Condensation and Precioitation

Figure 13.3. Relative cloud corer, Northern Hern~sphere,June-Ausust. (From Global


Atlas of Relative Cloud Cover.)

effects of such clouds with the great vertical the Northern Hemisphere, the fact that the
development of cumulus extending upward subpolar areas have greater cloudiness dur-
10,000 meters or more in places in the ing summer than during winter is somewhat
tropics, subtropics, and lower middle lat- masked by light reflected during winter
itudes. from sea ice and snow. Also during winter,
One must also remember that these com- no sunlight falls on the polar areas so no
posites of satellite-sensed light include light satellite sensing of clouds was possible when
reflected from all surfaces below the sat- these mosaics were compiled. Therefore,
ellites. By far the most' ieflective of these large whited-in circles blot out the pattern
surfaces are cloud tops, snow, and ice. Thus, in these regions. Infrared sensing of clouds
in higher middle latitudes, particularly in is now done routinely, day and night. Desert
Forms and ~isiributionsof Condensation and Precipitation 151

Figure 13.4. Relative clozrd rover, Southeri7 Hemisphere, Jzrne-A~rgust. (Froin Global
Atlas of Relative Cloud Cover.)

sand also has a fairly high reflectivity and a n d its position north of the equator
might account for some of the seemingly throughout the year corroborates the dis-
high amounts of cloud cover in places such cussion in Chapter 6 regarding the northerly
as the Sahara and Arabia. position of the meteorological equator rel-
The lower latitudes are depicted in Fig- ative to the geographical equator, due to
ures 13.5 and 13.6. The most-conspicuous the stronger general circulation of the at-
pattern in the tropics is the extended band mosphere in the Southern Hemisphere. Also
of clouds approximately 5- to 10-degrees well depicted on these composites are the
latitude wide, extending across the Pacific extensive developments of stratus cloud
and Atlantic oceans. This, of course, rep- decks over cold ocean areas off the sub-
resents the intertropical convergence zone, tropical western coasts of continents with
152 Forms and Distributions of Condensation and Precipitation

Figure 13.5 Relalr~ecloud col,et: Deceri7be1.-February (Fro~izGlobal Atlas of Relative


Cloud COT-er.)
their greater development during winter that condensation will take place as 100
(June-August) off South America and percent relative humidity is approached,
southwest Africa, a n d during summer but in no way can one be sure when
(June-August) off Baja California. Seasonal precipitation will fall from a cloud. The
change in cloudiness over India and south- initiation of this process seems to be related
east Asia is also striking. primarily to drop size. Most cloud droplets
are quite small and, on falling, evaporate
.- long before they reach the surface of the
Precipitation
earth. Precipitation depends upon many of
Precipitation is not as automatic a process these cloud droplets coalescing into drops
ascondensation. One can confidently expect that become large enough to fall to earth.
Forms and ~istributionsof Condensation and Precipitation 153

Figure 13.6. Relative cloud cover, June-August. (From Global Atlas of Relative
Cloud Cover.)
Several physical laws favor this happening. the surface of a small droplet than around
(a) The cloud droplets are in constant mo- the surface of a larger drop. This creates
tion and undergo constant evaporation and a vapor pressure gradient from small drops
recondensation within the cloud, providing to large drops which enables larger drops
ample opportunity for collisions to take to grow at the expense of smaller ones. (c)
place and for moisture to be transferred Greatly speeding up the process is the fact
from one droplet to another. (b) Aiding that above the freezing level in the atmo-
this process is the fact that the surface sphere, supercooled water droplets and ice
vapor pressure of a drop of water is in- crystals coexist within clouds. and at the
versely related to the radius of the drop. same temperature the surface vapor pres-
Therefore. vapor pressure is higher around sure is greater over water than over ice.
154 Forms and Distributions of Condensation and Preci~itation

Thus, moisture tends to move from water ice crystals above the condensation level.
droplets to ice crystals, and ice crystals act These grow into snowflakes in the cloud,
as nuclei around which large water drops and if nothing happens to them as they
form. fall to earth they fall as snow. Many times
Some meteorologists contend that no they melt on the way down and fall as
precipitation can occur without ice crystals rain. Sometimes falling supercooled water
in the higher levels of the clouds; others droplets freeze to produce small, round,
point out that considerable amounts of whitish pellets called "graupel" (sometimes
precipitation fall in the tropics when clouds called "soft hail"), which bounce when they
have not built up to the freezing level. It hit the ground.
does appear that the availability of appro- Snow does not fall everywhere on earth
priate hygroscopic nuclei in sufficient abun- (see Figure 13.7). In general, it is a rare
dance is a major criterion for precipitation occurrence equatorward of about 30" lat-
to occur. This principle is the one exploited itude in the Northern Hemisphere and at
in so-called "cloud seeding" projects that an even higher latitude in the Southern
attempt to trigger showers prematurely by Hemisphere, except in high mountains
injecting nuclei consisting of crystals of dry where it may occur at any latitude. And
ice (frozen carbon dioxide) or silver iodide anywhere it does fall it soon melts, unless
into clouds that contain supercooled water winter temperatures average below freezing.
droplets at the right stage to coalesce around Many countries do not record amounts of
such nuclei. Nonetheless, the effectiveness snowfall; indeed, the Russians argue that
of these methods is still under question. what is important is not how much snow
falls, but how much accumulates. This is
not entirely true, of course, since occasional
Forms of Precipitation
heavy, wet snows wreak havoc in areas such
Various forms of precipitation can occur, as the southeastern United States where,
depending upon the relations between (a) on the average during winter, there is little
the dew point and the freezing point in or no snow cover.
rising air that is causing moisture to con- It is difficult to depict the distribution
dense, (b) the temperature of the air through of snow, since snowfall data are inadequate
which the precipitation must fall on its way and snow depth on the ground varies dras-
to the surface, and (c) upon the temperature tically over short distances. Yet a snow
of the surface itself. If the dew point of cover is such a significant control over
the rising air is above freezing, water drop- various other aspects of climate that at-
lets will form as the air rises above the tempts have been made to map it accurately,
condensation level. If nothing happens to and some climatic classification schemes
them as they fall to earth, they will fall as have set major climatic boundaries ac-
rain. They may evaporate on the way down cording to whether or not there is a per-
and never reach the earth, or they may fall sistent snow cover during winter. Once a
through a colder air mass underneath a durable snow cover has been established,
front, whereupon they freeze into ice crys- the entire heat exchange of the surface is
tals that arrive at the earth as sleet. If the altered drastically. (The effects of these
temperature of the cool lower air is around altered relationships on temperature mag-
the freezing point, falling rain drops may nitudes and seasonal distributions will be
not freeze until they reach the earth, where- taken up in the next chapter.)
upon they freeze to alf 'surfaces to form An unusual form of precipitation is hail,
glaze ice. which consists of spherical or irregular
If the dew point of the rising air is below lumps of ice that generally fall during the
freezing, water vapor will turn directly into hottest days of the year. This seemingly
156 Forms and Distributions of Condensation and Precipitation

paradoxical timing is explained by the ne- punji, at an elevation of 1313 meters on


cessity for strong updrafts, which are gen- the southern slopes of the Khasi Hills in
erally present only during very warm pe- northeastern India, which averages 11,419
riods when the air has a high degree of mm. (450 inches); and Debundscha, near
instability. Hail is formed by rain drops the base of Cameroon Mountain just north
being carried upward beyond the freezing of the equator at the bend of the continent
level. Passing through layers of air with of western Africa, which averages 10,279
differing cloud droplet concentration, they mm. (405 inches). Similar amounts may
accumulate alternating shells of clear and occur in spots in western Colombia, but
rime ice. Most hailstones are less than a comparable records are lacking there.
centimeter (.4 inches) in diameter, but hail- Areas with the least rainfall are, appar-
stones as large as 14.2 centimeters (5.6 ently, Arica in northern Chile, which over
inches) in diameter have been recorded in a period of 59 years averaged 0.75 mm.
Kansas. Hail is always associated with se- (0.03 inches), and Wadi Halfa, Sudan, which
vere thunderstorms, and its distribution over a period of 39 years averaged 3 mm.
over the earth relates more to the intensity (0.12 inches). Much of the coast of Peru
111,
.,,/ of thunderstorms than to the frequency of and northern Chile averages less than 25
: i:.
..) their occurrence (compare Figures 13.8 and mm. (1 inch), as do portions of the south-
10.12). Places such as northern India with west coast of Africa. In such places years
large vertical moisture gradients, hence great may pass with no measurable precipitation,
convective instability, are especially prone. and then a rare shower will account for
the long-term average.
Amount and Distribution of Since precipitation falls in different forms,
mainly rain and snow, with different pro-
Precipitation portions in different parts of the world, to
The amount of precipitation that falls on construct a world distribution map (such
the earth's surface during the course of a as Figure 13.9) to show correct relative
year varies greatly from one part of the amounts of precipitation, all forms must
earth to another, from less than 50 mil- be reduced to water equivalents. The stan-
limeters (7 inches) along the subtropical dard practice is to convert snow to water
west coasts ofSouth America and southwest at a ratio of 10 to 1. The wetness of snow,
Africa and parts of the Sahara and Central of course, varies considerably, and now
Asia, to more than 5000 mm. (200 inches) many places weigh or melt snow samples
in some mountainous coastal areas, such to obtain more realistic water equivalents.
as northeast India and Burma, the Ca- In places such as the upper slopes of the
meroon and Guinea coasts of Africa, the southern Andes and the coastal mountains
western Colombian and southern Chilean of the Alaskan Panhandle and British Co-
coasts of South America, and spots in the lumbia, much of the precipitation falls as
Hawaiian islands (Figure 13.9). snow. Thus, the 3000-5000 mm. of pre-
In aUew places where the atmospheric cipitation shown on the map in these areas
moisture content is very high and the at- may amount to more-than 3000 centimeters
mospheric flow consistently converges and (100 feet) of snow in addition to some rain.
rises up mountain slopes, the precipitation In such places glaciers accumulate in valleys
may be copious. Such spots are Mt. Wai- between mountains, even though temper-
aleale on the island of Kauai, the north- atures are not extremely cold. But so much
westernmost of the larie islands of the snow falls that all cannot melt during sum-
Hawaiian chain, which averages 11,675 mm. mer, and it accumulates over the years and
(460 inches) of rainfall per year; Cherra- consolidates into glacial ice.
:m 0

I
i
2 *:
'
. 2
m
<
2 3'
0

On.
3

5 G,
Y 0

2
09
0

7.

z
2
2-
F;.
Forms and Distributions of Condensation and Precipitation 159

It is apparent from Figure 13.9 that low, so there is little capacity for precipi-
precipitation totals depend on two major tation. Even though precipitation can occur
controls: (a) amounts of moisture in the air fairly frequently in some of these areas,
and (b) lifting mechanisms to cause the the amounts are bbt great. Since it is always
water to precipitate out of the air. ~ x c e p t cold or cool, the ground is either frozen
for a few irregularities induced by rugged or very wet during a thaw, so such areas
topography, such as the southern Andes are not classified as dry despite their meager
and northern Rockies, by far the greatest precipitation.
amounts of precipitation fall in near-equa- Much of the plains areas of the middle
torial areas where atmospheric moisture is latitudes receive 500-1500 mm. (20-60
great and the aii is generally converging inches) of precipitation, which is generally
along portions of the intertropical conver- favorable for crops adapted to these areas,
gence zone, at least part of the year. In but seasonal and annual fluctuation in
places where orographic uplift is added, amounts may cause problems.
precipitation may become copious.
Areas receiving less than 500 mm. (20 Seasonality. Latitudinal zones that lie within
inches) of precipitation can be categorized the influence of the same circulation sys-
into three groups, although areally they tems throughout the year tend to have about
merge in some places. First, the subtropical the same precipitation in all seasons. In
high pressure belts, essentially straddling contrast, intermediate zones lying between
the tropic circles, account for many of the two very different precipitation controls
extensive deserts on earth, such as the may have great seasonal contrasts, because
Sahara and Kalahari in Africa, the Aus- the belts of high and low pressure, frontal
tralian desert, and the coastal desert of zones, and so forth, shift latitudinally with
western South America. Particularly in the seasons. Chapter 4 pointed out that the
coastal areas of these deserts, the oceans sun's direct rays shift from 23.j0N latitude
provideenough moisture for precipitation on 21 June to 23.5% latitude on 21 Decem-
to occur, but the lifting mechanism is lack- ber, and the zone of maximum heating shifts
ing. Strong atmospheric subsidence in the even more widely, to about 30"-35" latitude
subtropical high pressure cells produces on either side ofthe equator during the course
adiabatic warming and, in most cases, ex- of the year. Although inertias within the at-
treme temperature inversions that stymie mosphere keep the wind and pressure belts
precipitation processes. Second, interiors of from shifting nearly that far, and local effects
large continents, such as much of Central do induce irregularities, the circulation sys-
Asia north of the high mountains in the tems that largely control precipitation shift
Soviet Union, China, and Mongolia, and significantly from one season to another in
the intermontane region of western United most parts of the world.
States, have meager precipitation because These shifts result in the various belts
of the lack of a moisture source. Ordinarily, shown in Figure 13.10. For instance, it can
the atmosphere in these regions is relatively be seen that as the intertropical convergence
dry, either because they are so far from zone shifts about 10" latitude during the
the sea or because marine air is blocked year, the zone 5" or so on either side of
by mountain ranges. Third, the high lati- the equator is within its influence year-
tudes have only meager precipitation, the round and hence receives rain throughout
polar areas generally have no more precip- the year. In actuality, in much of the At-
itation than some of the subtropical deserts. lantic and Pacific oceans, this zone remains
Because the air is always cold in these north of the geographical equator all year,
areas, its capacity to hold moisture is very since the meteorological equator in those
160 Forms and Distributions of Condensat~onand Precipitation

POLE
I

'\
Figtire 13.10. Scherizatic shifts of pressure and wind belts and resultant precipitation
during the course of a year. (Frorn Introduction to Meteorology by Srerre Petterssen.
Copyright O 1958 by McGraiv-Hill, Inc. Used with permission of the McGraiv-Hill Book
i Cori~panj~.)

I.; regions lies significantly to the north of the front with its cyclonic storms in the pre- 1 !
..,
geographical equator (see Figure 13.9). On
either side of this so-called "doldrums" belt
vailing westerlies in the middle latitudes.
These circulation systems affect belts from
I ~
:,
i .:

of continuous precipitation lie belts that about 45" to about 65" latitude on either 1
.ki
, ,
., receive rain primarily during summer, when
the poleward influence of the intertropical
convergence zone shifts into their vicinities.
side of the equator and bring precipitation
to this latitudinal zone year-round. Just to
the equatorward of these belts lie zones
1
During winter the subtropical high pressure about 10"-15" latitude wide (approximately
belts shift equatonvard over these zones latitudes 27"-32" to 38"-45") that receive 1'
. and bring drought. These are the next sig- most of their rain during winter when the
nificant precipi&tion controls poleward prevailing westerlies shift equatonvard, but (

from the intertropical convergence zone, during summer they are akin to deserts as
and their influences are felt throughout the the subtropical high pressure belts shift
t
year farther poleward, around 20"-30" lat- poleward over them. Poleward of about 65"
itude on either side of $he equator. where latitude there is usually some precipitation 1
the climate is dry year-round. throughout the year, but in all seasons it
<,
The next significant precipitation con- is meager because of the restricted water-
trols poleward are the segments of the polar holding capacity of the colder air.
Forms and Distributions of Condensation and Precipitation 161

In the middle latitudes a fairly pro- rainfall that never get that much in the
nounced summer maximum of precipita- first place. However, on a percentage basis,
tion is the rule in interiors of continents, generally the more arid regions of the world
since at that time of year convective activity show the highest *year-to-year variability
is much greater than during winter. Within (Figure 13.11). Thus, not only do these
these continental interiors, the summer regions suffer from deficits of precipitation,
maximum tends to lag later into summer but the little they do get cannot be relied
the farther poleward the area, since in the upon. Such regions are located on the fringes
higher middle latitudes (55"-65") the late- of rain-bringing circulations. Some years
ness of snowmelt and ground thaw delays the circulation systems penetrate fairly
convective activity until later in summer. deeply into these dry lands and bring con-
This adds a double indemnity to agriculture siderable amounts of precipitation, but in
in higher middle latitudes: in these areas other years the circulation systems do not
severe limitations are set by the shortness penetrate the regions at all and the areas
of the growing season, which is com- remain essentially rainless.
pounded by the fact that during the growing Developers planning uses of dry lands
season the precipitation regime is about have over the years painfully become aware
the opposite of what it ideally should be. of these inevitable fluctuations, and they
In spring and early summer, the period of have also come to realize that long-term
rapid growth of crops, when moisture is averages do not represent precipitation me-
most needed it may be lacking, and later dians. For example, if a wheat farmer can
in summer and fall the harvest season is produce a crop with only 400 mm. of
generally the wettest time of year. Since rainfall per year but to survive must pro-
the harvest season is very short at these duce a good crop every other year, he should
latitudes. this dampness may be critical, be wary of farming in a region with a long-
and the entire harvest may be halted by term yearly average of exactly 400 mm. of
an early snowfall. Such is the case through- rain: because there will not be a 50-50 split
out much of the USSR and Canada. in years above and below the 400 mm.
In coastal areas in middle latitudes, pre- average. There will be more dry years than
cipitation tends to reach maximum levels wet years. Precipitation is not an infinite
in fall and early winter when sea-surface continuum in both directions; it cannot be
temperatures are generally at their highest, less than zero. Therefore, variations on the
and therefore convective activity is greatest dry side of the average cannot be as great
during outbreaks of relatively cold mP air in magnitude as variations on the wet side,
masses in the rears of cyclonic storms. and a few very wet years can balance a
Variability. In addition to seasonal cycles, greater number of relatively dry years. Thus,
precipitation amounts in many parts of the more than half the years are going to fall
world show great degrees of aperiodic vari- below normal, and less than half above
ability, with the greatest absolute differences normal. If the farmer's margin of survival
from year to year occurring in areas of depends on 50 percent of the years being
great amounts of rainfall. For instance, above average, he is going to go bankrupt.
Cherrapunji, India, which averaged 11,421 Short-term variations of days', weeks',
mm. (450 inches) per year over a 74-year or months' duration occur in east-west di-
period, in the one year from 1 August 1860 mensions within latitudinal belts, partic-
to 31 July 1861 received 26,447 mm. (1,042 ularly in the middle latitudes where the
inches), more than 15,000 mm. more than standing waves of the middle troposphere
normal. Obviously such large absolute de- so strongly influence formation and move-
viations could not occur in regions of low ment of surface circulation systems and
Forms and ~istributio
ns of Condensation and Precipitation 163

resultant precipitation amounts. It was


pointed out in Chapter 6 that generally
opposite types of weather will be experi-
enced in opposite limbs of troughs and
Intensity .+

ridges of these wave patterns. Generally The manner in which precipitation falls is
increased precipitation will be experienced also very important. If it falls in infrequent
on the eastward limbs of troughs (western cloudbursts it may do more harm than
limbs of ridges), and reduced precipitation good. causing floods and heavy erosion and
will be experienced on western limbs of generally running off the surface rather than
troughs (eastern limbs of ridges). Since these soaking in and moistening the soil. On the
standing waves do migrate slowly over time, other hand, if it falls in very prolonged
the same point on the earth's surface may drizzly weather, it is very effective in mois-
find itself first under one limb for several tening the soil and providing high humidity
weeks and then under another limb for conditions for lush plant growth. Much of
another several weeks. Thus, a prolonged northwestern Europe receives less than 750
spell of rainy weather will be followed by mm. (30 inches) of precipitation per year,
a similarly long spell of dry weather, or but in many areas this is spread over more
vice versa. In some places such shifts show than 150 days, so that practically every
a considerable seasonality that brings on other day gets a little rain. Under the cool,
unusual occurrences in the weather at about cloudy, humid conditions that prevail in
the same time each year. Such phenomena this area the rainfall is quite adequate. On
are known as singtllarities. But in most the other hand, in many subtropical regions
cases such east-west shifts are spurious and precipitation falls mainly as short, heavy
are simply integral parts of the climate of showers with thunderstorms, interspersed
much of the earth. Thus, even an area that with prolonged periods of very hot, sunny
would appear to be quite humid, judging weather when the earth dries up and veg-
from annual amounts of precipitation, could etation suffers. Because of a general lack
have periods of drought imbedded within of vegetative cover in dry regions, such
the year. If such occurrences could be pre- sharp showers run off rapidly and cause
dicted for growing seasons several months erosion and flash floods. Thus, the dry
ahead of time, it would be a great boon lands of the world are thrice damned: they
to agriculture, but under present technology don't get enough precipitation in the first
this is impossible. place, it cannot be relied upon from one
In many mid-latitude interiors of con- year to the next, and when it does come
tinents where so much of the precipitation in the form of hard showers it may cause
depends on summer thunderstorms, great more damage than good. Agriculture in the
variations in precipitation amounts can oc- desert areas is carried on with irrigation
cur over short distances because of the where water supply can be completely con-
intensity of rainfall over small areas. Thus, trolled. An unexpected heavy shower at the
it is difficult to generalize about drought wrong time of year may create havoc, par-
over large areas during any given growing ticularly during the harvest of perishable
season. fruits and vegetables.

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