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Natural Environments: The Atmosphere
GG 101 – Spring 2005
Boston University
Further Reading: Chapter 06 of the text book
Outline
- what is a cloud?
- cloud classifications
- clouds and precipitation
Myneni
Lecture 15: Clouds
Feb-28-05
(1 of 11)
Natural Environments: The Atmosphere
GG 101 – Spring 2005
Boston University
Myneni
Lecture 15: Clouds
Feb-28-05
(2 of 11)
Introduction
•
Previously,
– We learned that when air is displaced vertically, it cools due to adiabatic processes
– Discussed causes of vertical motion
• Convection
• Orographic lifting
– We also discussed what happens once the temperature cools to the dew point
temperature, namely, we expect clouds to form as water vapor changes to liquid
•
Today,
– We want to discuss what forms these clouds take
• Classify cloud formations
• Discuss characteristics that allow us to identify different types of clouds
Natural Environments: The Atmosphere
GG 101 – Spring 2005
Boston University
•
•
•
Myneni
Lecture 15: Clouds
Feb-28-05
(3 of 11)
Cloud Type by Form
Clouds:
– Optically thick mass of suspended water drops or ice crystals
Clouds can be classified by some simple, but subjective, criteria that also provides
information on the atmospheric conditions
One form of classification is based on appearance or form
Cirrus: Thin wispy clouds
Stratus: Layered clouds with
fairly continuous coverage
Cumulus:
Individual clouds characterized by heaped, puffy appearance
Have vertical extent, from 1-3km up to tropopause
Natural Environments: The Atmosphere
GG 101 – Spring 2005
Boston University
Myneni
Lecture 15: Clouds
Feb-28-05
(4 of 11)
Cloud Type by Altitude-01
•
•
•
•
•
Can also classify them based on their altitude
“Cirro”
“Alto”
“Strato”
“Fog”
Cirro
High clouds (7-18) km
Cold (<-25 C) with exclusively ice crystals
Cirrus: high, wispy clouds
Cirrocumulus: high, puffy clouds
Natural Environments: The Atmosphere
GG 101 – Spring 2005
Boston University
Myneni
Lecture 15: Clouds
Feb-28-05
(5 of 11)
Cloud Type by Altitude-02
Alto
Middle level clouds (2-7 km)
0-25 C composed of both water and ice crystals
Altostratus: thin, layered clouds
Altocumulus: individual or “rolls”
of clouds
Natural Environments: The Atmosphere
GG 101 – Spring 2005
Boston University
Myneni
Lecture 15: Clouds
Feb-28-05
(6 of 11)
Cloud Type by Altitude-03
Strato
Low level clouds (0 - 4 km)
> 5 C composed of water
Stratus: Dense, uniform gray layers
Stratocumulus: groups of dense, puffy clouds
Natural Environments: The Atmosphere
GG 101 – Spring 2005
Boston University
Myneni
Lecture 15: Clouds
Feb-28-05
(7 of 11)
Cloud Type by Altitude-04
Fog
Clouds at ground level
Radiation fog: forms at night when cold ground cools the air above it (in valleys)
Advection fog: forms when warm, moist air moves over colder surface and cools
(in coastal areas)
Natural Environments: The Atmosphere
GG 101 – Spring 2005
Boston University
Myneni
Lecture 15: Clouds
Feb-28-05
(8 of 11)
Cloud Type by Rain
•
•
Finally, we can classify them based on the presence of rain
Nimbus: any cloud that rains
Cumulonimbus: vertical clouds
that produce rain
Nimbostratus: low, flat clouds that drizzle
Natural Environments: The Atmosphere
GG 101 – Spring 2005
Boston University
Thunderstorms
– Thunderstorms form when we have an unstable,
moist atmosphere resulting in strong vertical motions
– Actually composed of many individual circulation
“cells”
• Updraft region is where the upward motion is
intense and where the rain typically falls
• Downdraft region is associated with downward
motion which can also be intense -> leads to
downbursts
• Cells are typically 10-20km across and
circulation within them occurs over 20 minutes
or so, i.e. new cells can form in 20 minutes
– Can produce hail: this is when an ice particle is
continuously cycled through the convection cell
before becoming heavy enough to fall out
– Can also produce lightening: as water is moved
within the cell, it develops a fictional charge; the
discharge occurs through a spark, i.e. lightening
Myneni
Lecture 15: Clouds
Feb-28-05
(9 of 11)
Natural Environments: The Atmosphere
GG 101 – Spring 2005
Boston University
Myneni
Lecture 15: Clouds
Feb-28-05
(10 of 11)
Clouds and Precipitation-01
•
Rain (or any precipitation)
– Requires
• Vertical motions -> cooling
• Presence of condensation nuclei -> something for the rain drops to form on
– Condensation does not necessarily mean rainfall; could just form clouds
– In order to form precipitation, the drops must be large enough to fall against the upward
motion of the air
• This requires that the aggregation (or coalescence) of lots of water molecules into
drops
• Cloud droplets are typically 50-100 micro-meters in diameter
• In contrast, rain drops are typically 500 micro-meters before they begin to fall
(drizzle)
• At 1000-2000 micro-meters, they are considered rain drops
Natural Environments: The Atmosphere
GG 101 – Spring 2005
Boston University
Myneni
Lecture 15: Clouds
Feb-28-05
(11 of 11)
Clouds and Precipitation-02
•
There are also other forms of precipitation
• Snow - crystallized water formed by the aggregation of frozen water
• Sleet - rain falling through a colder lower layer and freezing
• Hail - the aggregation of liquid water onto frozen water and subsequent freezing
• Note that precipitation does not necessarily fall straight to the ground - it might start
to fall then get caught in an updraft and cycle through; during this process more
aggregation occurs and we get very large rain or hail falling out (i.e. ‘golf-ball size
hail’)