properties of water. water molecules are made of 2 hydrogen atoms and 1 oxygen atom. the hydrogen...

Post on 03-Jan-2016

232 Views

Category:

Documents

1 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

TRANSCRIPT

Properties of Water

• WATER MOLECULES ARE MADE OF 2 HYDROGEN ATOMS AND 1 OXYGEN ATOM.

• THE HYDROGEN ATOM OF 1 MOLECULE I S AT TRACTED TO THE OXYGEN ATOM OF ANOTHER MOLECULE – HYDROGEN B ONDING

The Structure of Water

Specific Heat of Water

Because of the hydrogen bonding of water, it has a high specific heat This means that

it can hold a lot of heat

It heats and cools slowly

Specific Heat

The amount of heat required to change the temperature of 1g of a substance by 1 degree celcius.

In other words, the amount of heat required to change the temperature of a substance

Higher specific heat means it’s harder to warm something up.

Water Density & Temperature

• Water is most dense at 4oC (39oF) when atoms are closest to each other

• Atoms spread out when forming ice and vapor

The Structure of Ice

The Structure of Water (Liquid)

The Structure of Water Vapor

Water Density in the Ocean

• Ocean water temperatures range from -2oC to 30oC (28oF-86oF)

• In the ocean, the densest water is at the bottom and the least dense is at the top

Lowest Density

Highest Density

Mixed Layer

Surface Zone: 2% of ocean water is found in the surface

zone Lowest density, lowest salinity and highest

water temperatures

Transition Zone: 18% of ocean water is found in the

transition zone The layer is in between the warmer surface

zone and the colder deep zone The thermocline and pycnocline are located

in the transition zone

Deep Zone: 80% of ocean water found in the deep zone Sunlight never reaches the deep zone Water temperature is only a few degrees above freezing Highest density, highest salinity, lowest

temperatures

Three Ocean Layers:

Deep Currents: Water Density and Salinity

• 3-5% of ocean water is salt – known as salinity

• The greater the salt content, the denser the water is

• The ocean water is layered with the greatest amount of salinity at the bottom – halocline

• Most ocean salt comes from weathered rocks on the land

Changes in Salinity

The salinity of ocean water can be increased by removing surface water Evaporation Ice/Glacier Formation

The salinity of ocean water can be decreased by adding surface water Precipitation Melting of Ice/Glaciers Water Runoff from Land

Thermohaline Current

• Changes in the density of water results in a worldwide circulation of water

• Density differences are created by changes in temperatures and salinity levels

Water is heated at the Equator by the Sun and spreads outward towards the Polar Regions by the wind

• Water is cooled in the Polar Regions, increasing the density, then sinking to the bottom of the ocean – Downwelling

• Water spreads outward (towards the Equator) on the bottom of the ocean floor

Creation of the Thermohaline Current

Thermal Expansion - objects expand when heated

Continuation of Water Movement

Surface winds push the coastal water outwards to the ocean, pulling water up from the ocean floor - upwelling

Heat Exchange from the Thermohaline Current

• The Polar Regions are warmed by the warm currents

• Releases heat into the atmosphere as the water cools

• Helps increase the temperature as much as 41oF

• The Equator is cooled by the cool currents

• The cold currents absorb heat from the atmosphere

• Helps cool the Equator by as much as 30oF

• CIRCULAR MOVEMENT OCEAN CURRENTS

• CREATED BY WIND AND EARTH’S ROTATION

• SPINNING RESULTS FROM THE CORIOLIS EFFECT

Ocean Surface CurrentsWhat is an Ocean Gyre?

Coriolis Effect

• The spinning of Earth causes objects to move in a curved line across Earth’s surface

• This movement causes the gyres to move clockwise in the Northern Hemisphere and counter-clockwise in the Southern Hemisphere

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i2mec3vgeaI

North Atlantic Gyre

Each gyre is made up of several smaller surface currents

North Atlantic Gyre: Gulf Stream Current North Atlantic Current Canary Current North Equatorial Current

Characteristics: Western Stream (Gulf

Stream Current) – warm, narrow, deep, fast-moving

Eastern Stream (Canary Current) – cold, wide, shallow, slow-moving

Gulf Stream Curren

t

N. Atlantic Current Canary

Current

N. Equatorial

Current

Influence of the Wind

The currents that form the gyres following the direction of the wind Easterlies – move

the Gulf Stream Current northeast towards Northern Europe

Westerlies – move the Canary Current southwest towards South America and Mexico

Effects of Global Warming• Surface warming

of the water and increased freshwater (melting glaciers)

• Reduces downwelling

• No surface cooling

• Reduction of water circulation (loss of 20-50% of the water movement)

Impacts of Weakening Thermohaline Current

• Europe will experience a cooling trend (“The Big Freeze” last happened 12,800 and 11,500 years ago)

• Glacial tundra in Scandinavia

• Increased glaciation in mountain ranges worldwide

• More dust in the atmosphere from deserts in Asia

• Drought worldwide

• Cooling of Western North America and South America

• Extinction of many species

Weakening of the North Atlantic Currents

The ocean circulation of the Gulf Stream Current has been reduced by 30% in 2005

The North Atlantic Current & Norway Current has basically stopped in 2010

These currents work to: keep Ireland and the United

Kingdom mostly ice free the Scandinavia countries from

being too cold the entire world from entering

into another Ice Age

Normal Current Movement

Current Movement – August 2010

Coastal vs. inland climate

Because water has a high specific heat, its temperature will undergo very little changes. Thus, coastal areas close to the ocean tend to have moderate temperatures with a low variation in temperature. Areas further inland will be farther from the ocean and will thus experience larger variations in temperature.

Surface Currents vs. Density Currents

Surface Currents:

Movement in ocean caused by wind

Moves horizontallyIs on ocean surface

Density Currents:

Movement in ocean caused by differential salinity and temperatures of water

Moves vertically, relative to the surface currents

Involves upwelling and downwelling

Horizontal movement: Surface currentsDensity differences, sunlight, and wind cause currents

Ocean currents play a major role in maintaining Earth’s heat balance:• Heat is transferred from the tropics (near the

equator) where there is excess heat, to the polar region where there is less heat

Vertical movement: Density currents

Upwelling – water rich in nutrients from the bottom rises (excellent for fisheries!)

Downwelling – water rich in dissolved gases sinks (brings O2 to deep-water life!)

top related