cloud and precipitation notes. temperature affects water in the atmosphere water is always in the...

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Cloud and Precipitation Notes

Temperature affects water in the atmosphere

• Water is always in the atmosphere• It can be a solid (snow), a liquid (rain) or a gas (water vapor)

Water in the Air• Most of the Earth’s water is recycled• Oceans hold most of the water

Water Vapor condenses and forms clouds

• Clouds are made of condensed water vapor– Air cools as it rises and condenses into tiny droplets

or ice crystals– These tiny droplets/ice crystals are so light they

either float as clouds or fall very slowly

• Water must condense on something solid. In the air, water condenses on the particles found in it (dust, smoke, salt, etc.)

Characteristics of clouds

• Clouds form under different conditions

• The shapes and sizes are determined by air movement

• Location also is a factor– Higher altitude clouds are made of

tiny crystals – Lower altitude clouds are made of

droplets of water or a mixture of droplets and ice crystals

3 Main Types of Clouds

• Cirrus • Cumulus • Stratus

Two prefixes that help to describe clouds further are:

• Nimbo/nimbus – Produce

precipitation

• Alto–Medium

altitude

Cirrus Clouds• Means “curl of hair”• Form at high altitudes

in very cold air• It is made of ice• Wispy or feathery in

appearance• Normally found in fair

weather but can be a sign that a storm is approaching

Cumulus Clouds

• Means “heap” or “pile” • Puffy white clouds with darker bases• Usually appear in the daytime when

warm air rises and its water vapor condenses

• Cooler air sinks along the sides of these clouds keeping them apart

• Cumulonimbus clouds are ones that produce thunder storms, they are also called thunderheads

Stratus Clouds• Means “spread out”• These are the clouds that produce ‘grey’ skies• They form in flat layers when air cools over

large area without rising• They are smooth because they form without

strong air movement

Fog• A cloud that rests on the ground or a body of water• If forms when a surface is colder than the air above it• Fog tends to be heaviest at dawn, after the ground has

cooled overnight, it clears as the ground is heated by the sunlight

• It can be a safety hazard while driving because it makes it hard to see what is in front of you

Precipitation forms from water droplets or ice crystals

• Precipitation is any form of water that falls from the clouds and reaches Earth’s surface

• Cloud droplets are much smaller than a typical raindrop• Precipitation always comes from clouds but not all

clouds form precipitation• What types of clouds do?

For precipitation to occur…

• Cloud droplets (water) or ice crystals must grow heavy enough to fall through the air.

• They get heavier by colliding or combining with other droplets.

Measuring Precipitation

• Rain Gauge• Measuring snow

Types of Precipitation• Rain• Sleet• Freezing Rain• Snow• Hail

Rain

• Most common form

• .5mm in diameter

• Fall from nimbostratus clouds

Rain

Sleet

• When there are layers of warm air and cold air in the sky.

• As droplets fall they freeze into solid ice particles

Sleet

Freezing Rain

• Raindrops falling through cold air that don’t freeze until they reach a cold surface (the ground)

• Looks like sleet as it falls but freezes on the surface instead of right before it hits the surface

Freezing Rain

Freezing Rain vs. Sleet

• What is the difference between the two pictures?• Which is freezing rain and which is sleet? WHY?

Snow• Ice crystals grow and merge

to form snowflakes• Variety of shapes and sizes• Most have 6 sides or

branches• When they fall through moist

air that is near freezing they clump together

• When falling through colder drier air they don’t

Hail• Only forms inside

cumulonimbus clouds

• Strong updrafts carry the ice pellets up and down causing the pellet to get bigger

• When it gets to heavy it falls to the ground

Hail

Precipitation carries pollution• Acid rain forms when factories, power plants,

automobiles and some natural sources release sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides into the air

• The combine with the water to form sulfuric acid and nitric acid

• This acid rain can affect trees, lakes and damage the surface of buildings and sculptures

Acid Rain damage

How Acid Rain Forms

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