Home

Chapter 16 | Chapter 17 | Chapter 12 | Syllabus | Grading Procedures | Class Rules | Earth Science SOL's | Lab Report Rubic | Chapter 1 | Chapter 2 | Chapter 3 | Chapter 4 | Chapter 5 | Chapter 6 | Chapter 7 | Chapter 8 | Chapter 9 | Chapter 10 | Chapter 11 | Chapter 12 | Chapter 18 | Chapter 19 | Chapter 20 | Chapter 21 | Chapter 22 | Chapter 23 | Chapter 24 | Chapter 13 | Chapter 14 | Chapter 15
Chapter 14
Earth Science College Prep

Atmosphere

Atmosphere

Chapter 14

Earths Atmosphere

Section 14.1

What is the composition of the Earths Atmosphere?

Composition of the Atmosphere

Atmospheric Gases (clean, dry)

Nitrogen --------------78%

Oxygen ---------------21%

Argon -------------------0.93%

Carbon Dioxide --------0.03%

Others -------------------0.04

Composition of the Atmosphere

Atmospheric Gases (cont.)

water varies from 0 to 4%

Composition of the Atmosphere

Atmospheric Solids And Liquids

Dust

Salt

Ice

Liquid water

Give the layers of the Earths Atmosphere.

Structure of the Atmosphere

Troposphere -------Temperature decreases

Stratosphere -------Temperature increases

Mesosphere --------Temperature decreases

Thermosphere -----Temperature increases

Structure of the Atmosphere

Weather in Troposphere

Ozone layer between Stratosphere and Mesosphere; adds energy to those layers

Ionosphere ionized layer in the thermosphere that affects radio transmission

Atmospheric Pressure

Weight of Air = Atmospheric Pressure

Less Air above you with altitude less pressure

Atmospheric pressure at sea level

14.7 lb/in2

760 mm of mercury

29.92 inches of mercury

Atmospheric Pressure

Which air is heavier: dry or humid?

Atmospheric Pressure

H2O

H - 1X2 = 2

0 - 16

Total = 18

N2 - 28

O2 - 32

CO2 - 44

Atmospheric Pressure

Water molecules weigh less than air molecules. Thus humid air weighs less than dry air and has less pressure.

Temperature in the Atmosphere

Hot air low pressure

Cold air high pressure

What is Ozone?

What is Ozone?

Molecule containing 3 atoms of oxygen. Most oxygen molecules have 2 atoms.

Why is the Ozone layer important?

Why is the Ozone layer important?

Blocks harmful Ultraviolet radiation which can cause cancer.

What causes the hole in the Ozone Layer?

What causes the hole in the Ozone Layer?

CFCs (Chlorofluorocarbons) destroy ozone molecules

Energy from the Sun

Section 14.3

Energy Transfer in the atmosphere

Radiation electromagnetic waves

Conduction molecules bump into one another

Convection flow of a heated material

Energy Transfer in the atmosphere

30% reflected back into space

70% insolation(incoming solar radiation)

20% absorbed by clouds and atmosphere

50% absorbed by earths surface

5% reflected by surface

25% reflected by clouds and atmosphere

Our Unique Atmosphere

Convection Currents transfer energy around our atmosphere

The Water Cycle

Evaporation

Condensation

Precipitation

Runoff or groundwater

Movement of air

Section 14.4

Wind Formation

Wind horizontal movement of air caused by differences in pressure

 

Wind Formation

Coriolis Effect

Deflects wind to right in northern hemisphere and left in the southern hemisphere

Temperature difference

Length of day

Angle of sun

Pressure difference

Wind blows from a high to a low pressure

 

Global Pressure Systems

Equatoral Low Equator

Subtropical high 30o

Subpolar low 60o

Polar high - Poles

Global Surface Wind Systems

Doldrums Equator

Trade Easterlies 30o to Equator

Horse Latitudes 30o

Westerlies 30o to 60o

Polar Easterlies Poles to 60o

High-Altitude Winds

Jet streams upper level wind systems

Daily and Seasonal Winds

Sea Breeze afternoon

Land Breeze early morning(night)

Mountain Breeze afternoon

Valley breeze early morning(night)

Daily and Seasonal Winds

Monsoons

Summer rainy

Winter - dry

Wind Systems

Enter supporting content here