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Warm-Up  Give an example of precipitation. – Rain/snow/hail  Does latent heat produce a temperature change? – no  What does a high dew point indicate? – Moist air Cloud Formation Chapter 18. Section 2 Air Compression and Expansion  Temperature changes that happen even though heat isn’t added or subtracted are called adiabatic temperature changes  When air is allowed to expand, it cools, and when it is compressed, it warms  Any time a volume of air moves upward, it passes through regions of successive lower pressure  Dry Adiabatic Rate – the rate of adiabatic warming or cooling in unsaturated air (1ºC/100 m)  Wet Adiabatic Rate – the rate of adiabatic temperature change in saturated air; it is always less than the dry adiabatic rate Cloud Formation by Adiabatic Cooling Orographic Lifting and Frontal Wedging  Four mechanisms that can cause air to rise are orographic lifting, frontal wedging, convergence, and localized convective lifting  Orographic Lifting – mountains acting as barriers to the flow of air, forcing the air to ascend  Many of the rainiest places on Earth are located on windward mountain slopes  By the time the air has reached the leeward side of the mountain, much of its moisture has been lost  Front – the boundary between two adjoining air masses having contrasting characteristics  The cooler denser air acts as a barrier over which the warmer, less dense air rises Orographic Lifting Frontal Wedging Convergence and Localized Convective Lifting  Whenever air in the lower atmosphere flows together, lifting results, this is called convergence  This leads to adiabatic cooling and possibly cloud formation  On warm summer days, unequal heating of Earth’s surface may cause pockets of air to be warmed more than the surrounding air  Consequently, this warmer, less dense packet will move upward  These rising parcels of warmer air are called thermals  The process that produces rising thermals is localized convective lifting  When warm parcels rise above the condensation level, clouds form Convergence Localized Convective Lifting Stability  Stable air is any air which resists vertical movement due to density differences  Stable air tends to remain in its original position, while unstable air tends to rise  Air stability is determined by measuring the temperature of the atmosphere at various heights  The rate of change of air temperature with height is called the environmental lapse rate  Temperature Inversion – a layer where the temperature increases with height; the most stable conditions for air  Clouds associated with the lifting of unstable air are towering and often generate thunderstorms and tornados Stable Atmosphere and Adiabatic Rate Absolute Stability Absolute Instability Condensation  Recall that condensation happens when water vapor in the air changes to a liquid in the form of dew, fog, or clouds  For any of the forms of condensation to occur, the air must be saturated  Generally, there must be a surface for water vapor to condense on  Condensation Nuclei – tiny bits of particulate matter that serve as surfaces on which water vapor condenses  When condensation takes place, the initial growth rate of cloud droplets is rapid  It diminishes quickly because the excess water vapor is absorbed by numerous competing particles  This results in the formation of a cloud consisting of millions upon millions of tiny water droplets Comparative Diameters Assignment  Read Chapter 18, Section 2 (pg. 510-516)  Do Section 18.2 Assessment #1-7 (pg. 516)