Lesson 7 (MET-O)
Lesson 7 (MET-O)
Lesson 7 (MET-O)
Learning Outcomes:
1. Explain
qualitatively, with the aid of sketches, the circulation cells which would exist on a rotating earth
not inclined to its orbits of rotation around the sun, and with homogeneous surface
the formation of anabatic and katabatic winds
2. Describe
the characteristics and location of the doldrums, intertropical convergence zone, trade winds,
sub-tropical oceanic highs, westerlies, and polar easterlies
monsoon regime
3. List
4. Apply
5. Draw the mean surface pressure and wind distribution over the earth’s surface in January and July
Synoptic wind system is of larger scale in nature and is caused by synoptic pressure differences and
temperature of the wind where it spans smaller distances - a few hundred to a few thousand kilometers,
and possessing shorter lifetimes, a few to several days, this class contains the migrating cyclones and
anticyclones that control day-to-day weather changes, this scale is smaller when compared to planetary
scale of wind system
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Sometimes the planetary and synoptic scales are combined into a single classification termed
the large-scale, or macroscale. Large-scale wind systems are distinguished by the predominance
of horizontal motions over vertical motions and by the preeminent importance of the Coriolis
force in influencing wind characteristics. Examples of large-scale wind systems include the trade
winds and the westerlies.
Wind Forces
Pressure Gradient Force – is the movement of air from low pressure to high pressure, this is the force
exerted by an air relative to the pressure it embodies, and pressure is inversely proportional to
temperature thus, high temperature air is characterized as having low-pressure while low temperature
air is characterized as having high-pressure, and pressure here is the force exerted per unit area.
Cyclonic Wind (Low Pressure Wind) – is the wind rotating at counter-clockwise (due to the combined
effects of Coriolis, pressure gradient force where there is an abnormal or excess force on either side that
tends to cause such wind) direction in Northern Hemisphere and clockwise in Southern Hemisphere.
Anticyclonic Wind (High Pressure Wind) - is the wind rotating at clockwise (due to the combined effects
of Coriolis, pressure gradient force where there is an abnormal or excess force on either side that tends
to cause such wind) direction in Northern Hemisphere and counter-clockwise in Southern Hemisphere.
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Global Circulations
1. Hadley Cell
2. Ferrel Cell
3. Polar Cell
During the night particularly with a clear sky at high places like the top of cliffs and
mountain with a steep slope cool and consequently the air over them also cools and the
pressure becomes high so that due to gravitation this denser air flows down the slope forming a
katabatic wind. (This may have no relation with atmospheric pressure distribution). Whe n it
reaches sea level it blows horizontally with violent force of about 7 on the Beaufort Wind scale
(28 to 33 kts). This wind is most common off the coast of Greenland and in the Adriatic.
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Doldrums, Inter-tropical Convergence Zone, Trade Winds, Sub-tropical oceanic highs, Westerlies, and
Polar Easterlies
Trade Winds
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Southern Hemisphere. Because winds are named for the direction from which the wind is blowing, these
winds are called the northeast trade winds in the Northern Hemisphere and the southeast trade winds
in the Southern Hemisphere. The trade winds meet at the doldrums.
During summer in the Northern Hemisphere (top image above), two dominant subtropical highs emerge
-- the Bermuda high over the Atlantic Ocean and the Pacific high. The Bermuda high shares its name
with the island of Bermuda because, over the long haul during summer, the average position of this high
lies near Bermuda. These two subtropical highs owe their relative strength, in part, to the oceans.
During the Northern Hemisphere's summer, the oceans are generally cooler compared to the warmer
continents. In turn, cooler, denser maritime air that overlies the oceans serves to boost surface
pressures, paving the way for relatively robust subtropical highs during summer.
During the Northern Hemisphere's winter (bottom image above), when the oceans are warmer
compared to the continents, the dominant subtropical highs aren't as strong, with the Bermuda high
shifting eastward and gradually taking an average position near the Azores Islands. As a result, the
Atlantic subtropical high assumes the seasonal name, Azores high.
So, why do these subtropical high-pressure systems exist in the first place? Over the long haul, the clear
signal from the recurrent upward motion in the ascending branch of each Hadley Cell is a stream of air
flowing poleward at high altitudes. As the air flows poleward, it cools. And eventually, in the general
neighborhood of 30-degrees latitude, the poleward flow in the upper branch of each Hadley Cell
becomes convergent. In turn, this mass convergence of cold air moving in the upper branch of the
Hadley Cell adds weight to local air columns near 30-degrees latitude, increasing surface pressure there,
and helps to establish the persistent belt of subtropical highs.
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Westerlies
Polar Easterlies
- are areas of high atmospheric pressure around the north and south poles; the north polar
high being the stronger one because land gains and loses heat more effectively than sea.
- The cold temperatures in the polar regions cause air to descend to create the high pressure
(a process called subsidence), just as the warm temperatures around the equator cause air
to rise to create the low-pressure intertropical convergence zone.
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- Rising air also occurs along bands of low pressure situated just below the polar highs around
the 60th parallel of latitude. These extratropical convergence zones are occupied by the
polar fronts where air masses of polar origin meet and clash with those of tropical or
subtropical origin. This convergence of rising air completes the vertical cycle around the
polar cell in each latitudinal hemisphere.
Polar Vortex
Jet Streams
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Jet streams are relatively narrow bands of strong wind in the upper levels of the atmosphere.
The winds blow from west to east in jet streams, but the flow often shifts to the north and
south. Jet streams follow the boundaries between hot and cold air.
Since these hot and cold air boundaries are most pronounced in winter, jet streams are the
strongest for both the northern and southern hemisphere winters.
In addition, with the three-cell circulations mentioned previously, the regions around 30° N/S
and 50°-60° N/S are areas where
temperature changes are the greatest.
As the difference in temperature
increases between the two locations the
strength of the wind increases. Therefore,
the regions around 30° N/S and 50°-60°
N/S are also regions where the wind, in
the upper atmosphere, is the strongest.
The 50°-60° N/S region is where the polar
jet located with the subtropical jet
located around 30°N. Jet streams vary in
height of four to eight miles and can reach
speeds of more than 275 mph (239 kts /
442 km/h).
The actual appearance of jet streams
result from the complex interaction between many variables - such as the location of high and
low pressure systems, warm and cold air, and seasonal changes. They meander around the
globe, dipping and rising in altitude/latitude, splitting at times, and forming eddies, and even
disappearing altogether to appear somewhere else.
Jet streams also "follow the sun" in that as the sun's elevation increases each day in the spring,
the average latitude of the jet stream shifts poleward. (By Summer in the Northern Hemisphere,
it is typically found near the U.S. Canadian border.) As Autumn approaches and the sun's
elevation decreases, the jet stream's average latitude moves toward the equator.
Jet streams are often indicated by a line on a weather map indicating the location of the
strongest wind. However, jet streams are wider and not as distinct as a single line but are
actually regions where the wind speed increases toward a central core of greatest strength.
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One way of visualizing this is to consider a river. The river's current is generally the strongest in
the center with decreasing strength as one approaches the river's bank. Therefore, it is said that
jet streams are "rivers of air".
Monsoon Regime
Monsoons are like land and sea breezes, but on a larger scale.
Monsoons blow for approximately six months from the northeast
and six months from the southwest,.They occur because of
seasonal changes in the temperature of land and water. In the
winter, they blow from land to water. In the summer, they blow
from water to land. In regions that experience monsoons, the
seawater offshore is extremely warm. The hot air absorbs a lot of
the moisture and carries it over the land. Summer monsoons bring
heavy rains on land. Monsoons occur in several places around the
globe. The most important monsoon in the world is in southern
Asia (Figure below). These monsoons are important because they
carry water to the many people who live there.
Though mean annual temperature is fairly high but summer and winter seasons are sharply
differentiated due to northward (summer solstice) and southward movement of the sun (winter
solstice).
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Summer and Winter Solstices
The seasons on Earth change because the planet is slightly tilted on its axis as it travels around the Sun.
This means different points on Earth receive more or less sunlight at different times of year. If Earth
were not tilted, the Sun would always appear to be directly above the Equator, the amount of light a
given location receives would be fixed, and there would be no seasons. There also would be no need to
mark equinoxes or solstices.
The two solstices happen in June (20 or 21) and December (21 or 22). These are the days when the Sun’s
path in the sky is the farthest north or south from the Equator. A hemisphere’s winter solstice is the
shortest day of the year and its summer solstice the year’s longest. In the Northern Hemisphere the June
solstice marks the start of summer: this is when the North Pole is tilted closest to the Sun, and the Sun’s
rays are directly overhead at the Tropic of Cancer. The December solstice marks the start of winter: at
this point the South Pole is tilted closest to the Sun, and the Sun’s rays are directly overhead at the
Tropic of Capricorn. (In the Southern Hemisphere the seasons are reversed.)
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The equinoxes happen in March (about March 21) and September (about September 23). These are the
days when the Sun is exactly above the Equator, which makes day and night of equal length.
Local Winds
Bora refers to katabatic wind that blows down the slopes of the mountains on the north and east coast
of the Adriatic Sea; often dangerous as it often blows without any warning and in violent gust.
Gregale is a strong NE wind in the central and western Mediterranean Sea in Malta and Sicily.
Levanter refers to east wind in the Strait of Gibraltar. It brings much moisture, clouds, haze and fog,
sometimes rain.
Scirocco is southerly wind in the Mediterranean coming from North Africa; it causes fog.
Harmattan is an east wind on the west coast of Africa between Cape Verde and the Gulf of Guinea in
November to March. It brings clouds of dust and sand from the Sahara.
Mistral is a strong N or NW wind in the Gulf of Lyons of gale force and produces rough seas.
Norther is a north wind of gale force along the coast of Chile. Gulf of Mexico and western Carribean
during winter.
Pampero is a squall occurring at the passage of a cold front in Rio de la Plata, it blows from the north
and back suddenly to a S or SW direction; Frequent in June to September.
Shamal is a NW wind in the Persian Gulf, Gulf of Oman and along the Makran coast.
Southerly Buster refers to a south wind on the SE coast of Australia that occurs mainly in summer; as a
warning a long cumulus roll appears on the horizon and the wind drops to a calm then suddenly blows
with gale force accompanied by rapid fall in temperature.
Sumatra refers to a squally wind from the SW during the month of May to October, in the Strait of
Malacca and west coast of Malaya.
Williwaw is an unpredictable and violent wind rising suddenly in Aleutian waters especially close to the
mountainous coast of the islands in that region.
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Papagayo is a north to north easterly wind which periodically blows through the gap in the mountain
ranges of central America. It is named after the Gulf of Papagayo on the Pacific coast near Costa Rica.
Papagayo can be stronger than the trade winds which normally blows in this region.
Abroholas is a squally frequent wind that occurs from May through August between Cabo de Sao Tome
and Cabo Frio on the Coast of Brazil.
Café Doctor is dry south-easterly wind that blows on the South African coast during Summer.
Tehuantepecer is a violent north to northwesterly wind funneled through the Gulf of Tehuantepec on
the Pacific coast of Mexico and can be felt up to 100 miles out to the Pacific ocean. It occurs during
winter in the northern part of America.
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You can look at the figure on the subtropical oceanic highs for a more detailed and perceptible
representation of pressure and wind distribution.
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