Chapter 4 Moisture and Atmospheric Stability

  1. Calorie
    is the amount of energy required to raise the temperature of 1 gram of water 1 degree Celcius, 1.8 degree F.
  2. Evaporation
    The process of converting a liquid to a gas (vapor).
  3. Condensation
    The reverse process, occurs when water vapor changes to the liquid state.  During condensation, water vapor molecules release energy (latent heat of condensation) in an amount equivalent to what was absorbed during evaporation.
  4. Sublimation
    Is the conversion of a solid directly to gas, without passing through the liquid state.
  5. Deposition
    The conversion of a vapor directly to a solid.
  6. Humidity
    Used to describe the amount of water vapor in the air.
  7. Vapor pressure
    As the part of the total atmospheric pressure attributable to its water vapor content.
  8. Relative Humidity
    Is the ratio of the air's actual water vapor content compared with the amount of water vapor required for saturation at that temperature (and pressure).
  9. Dew-point temperature
    Is the temperature at which water vapor begins to condense.
  10. Lifting Condensation Level
    The altitude at which a parcel of air reaches  saturation and cloud formation begins.
  11. Wet Adiabetic Rate
    When a parcel of air ascends above the lifting condensation level, the rate at which it cools is reduced.
  12. Localized Convective Lifting
    Produces rising thermals
  13. Stable Air
    If the parcel of air is cooler than the surrounding environment, it will be more dense; and if allowed to do so, it will sink to its original position.  Resists vertical movement
  14. Unstable air
    If, however, our imaginary rising parcel of air is warmer and hence less dense than the surrounding air, it will continue to rise until it reaches an altitude where its temperature equals that of its surroundings.
  15. Absolute Stability
    Prevails when the environmental lapse rate is less than the wet adiabatic rate.
  16. Absolute Instability
    When the environmental lapse rate is greater than the dry adiabatic rate.
  17. Conditional Instability
    Prevails when moist air has an environmental lapse rate between the dry and wet adiabatic rates (between about 5° and 10°C per 1000 meters).
  18. Level of free convection (LFC)
    The altitude at which air rises because of its own buoyancy.
  19. Temperature Inversion
    Is a layer of the atmosphere in which temperature increases with with altitude, rather than the more common condition of decreasing with altitude.
  20. Evapotransportation
    A smaller amount of groundwater is taken up by plants, which release it into the atmosphere.
  21. Adiabatic temperature changes
    Heat energy was neither added to nor subtracted
  22. Entrainment
    The surrounding air infiltrates a rising or descending column of air.
  23. Dry adiabatic rate
  24. Orographic Lifting
    Occurs when elevated terrains, such as mountains, act as barriers to the flow of air.
  25. Frontal Lifting
    Warm and cold air masses often collide, producing boundaries called fronts.  Rather than mixing, the cooler, denser air acts as a barrier over which the warmer, less dense air rises.
  26. Convergence
    When the wind pattern near Earth's surface is such that more air is entering an area than is leaving-a phenomenon called convergence-lifting occurs
  27. Thermals
    Rising parcels of warmer air.
  28. Adiabatic Cooling
    When a parcel of air is forced to rise, its temperature will decrease because of expansion.
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davecowman
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Chapter 4 Moisture and Atmospheric Stability
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Moisture and Atmospheric Stability
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