Geography 140
Introduction to Physical Geography

Lecture: Pressure as an Element of Weather

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III. Air pressure is the mediation that gets air moving, so that the two 
     adiabatic processes can produce changes in air temperature.
     A. Pressure is the weight of the atmosphere compressing the air down onto 
        the surface of the earth.
     B. It is measured a variety of ways.
        1. Directly as weight:
           a. 1 kg/cm2 at sea level
           b. 15 lb./sq. in. at sea level
        2. As the height of a column of mercury in a mercury barometer:
           a. 76 cm at sea level
           b. 29.9" at sea level
        3. Directly as force exerted
           a. The unit of force measurement is the millibar (mb), sometimes 
              (and increasingly) called the hectoPascal.  One mb = 0.01 Pa, 
              so, 100 Pascals are a hectoPascal, 1 mb = 1 hPa.
           b. One mb or hPa equals a force of 1,000 dynes/cm2. Big 
              help that is!
           c. 1 dyne is the force that will accelerate 1 g of mass 1 cm 1 
              second per second (or 1/100,000 newton)
           d. At sea level, air pressure is close to 1,000 mb (it averages 
              about 1,013.2 mb, actually).
           e. 1 cm of mercury, then, is 13.3 mb; 1 in. of mercury is 33.9 mb
           f. Just remember that sea level air pressure is 1,013.2 mb.
        4. All of these methods can be expressed as a "standard atmosphere" or 
           "bar": 1 atm is the average air pressure at sea level (therefore, 
           it's equal to 1,013.2 mb, 101,325 Pa, 1,013.2 hPa, 76 cm of 
           mercury, and 1 kg/cm2). Got all that?
     C. All this attention to measurement expresses the fact that air pressure 
        varies quite a bit.
        1. We've seen that air pressure drops quickly with increases in 
           altitude.
        2. As Torricelli himself noted, air pressure varies at one place at 
           different times.
        3. And, as we'll explore today, air pressure varies from place to 
           place at one time:  This means we can map air pressure variations, 
           which really excites us geographers!
     D. A common cause of air pressure differences is variation in 
        temperature.
        1. Cooled air tends to sink, which increases air pressure.
        2. Warmed air tends to rise, which reduces air pressure.
     E. These relative variations in air pressure have names:
        1. A high pressure area is an "anti-cyclone."
        2. A low pressure area is a "cyclone."
           a. Possible point of confusion:  There are popular usages of the 
              word, "cyclone," that differ somewhat from scientific usage.
           b. In North America, when you hear the word, "cyclone" (especially 
              if you live in the Midwest or South), you think tornado.
           c. In Southern Asia, when you hear the word, "cyclone," you think 
              hurricane or typhoon.
           d. Well, all tornadoes and all hurricanes are cyclones, but not all 
              cyclones are hurricanes or tornadoes:  Our ordinary mid-latitude 
              winter storms are also cyclones, and, on a really dinky scale, 
              even a dust-devil is a tiny cyclone.
     F. Thus varying from place to place, air pressure can be mapped. 
        1. Air pressure is mapped with isolines.  You remember those, don't 
           you?  An isoline is any line on a map connecting places having the 
           same value of something or other.  We've bumped into them before:  
           parallels are isolines of latitude, and meridians are isolines of 
           longitude.  Isohyets are isolines connecting all places with the 
           same precipitation; isotherms connect places with the same 
           temperature statistics; isagons connect all places having the same 
           magnetic declination; and contours connect all places having the 
           same elevation (see Lecture 11 on map symbolization).
        2. Isobars are the isolines used to connect all places having the same 
           corrected air pressure readings (they're normally corrected for 
           elevation, because increasing elevation decreases air pressure).
        3. The conventional isobar interval is 4 mb:  This interval gives you 
           a clear picture of regional highs and lows and the structure of air 
           pressure variations across space, but it doesn't overwhelm you with 
           too many lines. On the idealized map below, see how each blue line 
           has a value 4 mb higher than one neighboring line and 4 mb lower 
           than the opposite neighbor?

           [ idealized isobar map of generic area ]

        4. Here is an isobar map of New Zealand and eastern Australia:

           [ isobar map of New Zealand and eastern Australia ]

           Describe the general latitude and longitude of the highest pressure 
           area on the map.  That high has an air pressure in excess of .... 
           how many millibars (or hectoPascals)?  Where is the lowest pressure 
           area?  That low has an air pressure below ... how many mb (hPa)?  
           You get the idea.  
        5. Remember a very important point:  Air pressure is RELATIVE to the 
           regional context.  No specific value is always the breakpoint 
           between a high and a low.  On this map, the high is somewhat 
           greater than 1,016 hPa (but less than 1,020 hPa, or that would have 
           been mapped with an isobar), and the low is less than (992 hPa, but 
           greater than 988 hPa).  On another map, it could well be that 992 
           is the regional HIGH, while, somewhere else, maybe 1,020 is the 
           regional LOW.  You must interpret values within their regional 
           context.
     G. Nature can't stand inequality.  In this case, variations in air 
        pressure are compensated for by transferring air from high pressure 
        zones to low pressure zones to try to balance out the differences.  
        This horizontal air flow is "wind" or "advection."
        1. Mechanics of air transfer.


           [ highs, lows, winds in cross-section, modified from K.A. 
Kepple, USA Today Weather Book ]

           a. A high is at the bottom of a column of air being forced down 
              from above.  Air at the surface, then, is being squished out 
              away from the high.
           b. A low represents a lifting of the air above a given place.  This 
              creates a partial vacuum, which sucks air to it from all 
              directions.  The greater the lifing, the more effective the 
              vacuum and its pulling effect.
        2. The direction and speed of winds are determined by the relative 
           location and intensity of highs and lows.
           a. This information comes from an isobar map.
           b. The intensity of a high or low and the speed of the winds 
              between them is shown on the map by the spacing of the isobars.
                i. If they're close together, then there's a rapid change of 
                   pressure in a short distance, so wind will move across 
                   these isobars at a high speed.
               ii. The change in pressure as shown by isobar spacing is called 
                   the "pressure gradient." Wind will flow down the pressure 
                   gradient from high to low, sort of the way water will flow 
                   down an elevation gradient from high country to lowland. 
                   You can visualize the analogy with an elevation gradient by 
                   constructing an X-Y graph showing distance between a high 
                   and a low as the abcissa (X or horizontal axis) and air 
                   pressure on the ordinate (Y or vertical axis).  For each 
                   distance reading, you'd look at the map to get (or infer) 
                   the air pressure reading and plot that reading above the 
                   distance.  When you were done, you'd have created a cross-
                   section of the pressure gradient and could instantly 
                   visualize where the air is trying to flow.  This is an easy 
                   way to understand the "pressure gradient force," which sets 
                   the direction and speed of the air flow.  Here are a couple 
                   of graphics that convey the general idea, 

[ pressure gradients, Australian Government Board of Meteorology ]  

 

 

Shallow Pressure Gradient  

 

 

Steep Pressure Gradient


        3. Coriolis Effect.
           a. Now that I've carefully established this analogy between the 
              behavior of air around a pressure gradient and the behavior of 
              water around an elevation gradient, I'm going to mess it up a 
              little.  
           b. Once wind is set in motion by the pressure gradient force, it 
              does not flow directly from high to low in a straight line as 
              might be expected.  Its path is knocked off course because of 
              the earth's rotation.
           c. This distortion due to rotation is called the "Coriolis Effect," 
              after Gaspard Gustave de Coriolis (1792-1843), a French 
              mathematician who made the first observation of this distortion 
              in the early 19th century.
           d. The influence of Coriolis Effect is stated in Ferrel's Law:  
              "Any horizontally moving object in the Northern Hemisphere will 
              exhibit an apparent right-hand deflection and, in the Southern 
              Hemisphere, an apparent left-hand deflection."
           e. So, any object in the Northern Hemisphere trying to move north 
              is deflected to its right, winding up east of its destination; 
              if it tries to move east, it winds up south of its destination; 
              if it tries to move south, it winds up west of its target; and, 
              if it tries to move west, it winds up north of the destination.  
              Exactly the opposite happens in the Southern Hemisphere.  On the 
              globe below, the black arrows are the planned paths and targets, 
              and the magenta arrows are the actual, deflected paths.


              [ target and deflection due to Coriolis Effect, C.M. 
Rodrigue, 2000 ]

           f. Isn't that weird?  It actually does make sense.
                i. Remember, the earth rotates eastward at a constant angular 
                   speed:  15°/hour?
               ii. That same angular speed translates into different linear 
                   speeds at different latitudes:  roughly 1,660 km/h at the 
                   equator, but only about 830 km/h by the time you get up to 
                   60° N or S (how'd I get that?  The cosine of 60° is 
                   0.5 or half; so what do you suppose our actual linear speed 
                   of rotation is here at 34° N?).

                   [ same angular speed = different linear speed at 
different latitudes, D. McConnell, 1999 ]

              iii. So, any horizontally moving object heading north or south 
                   away from the equator does so, carrying the eastbound 
                   motion it had on the equator (1,660 km/h), which becomes 
                   faster and faster relative to the motion of the latitudes 
                   through which it passes, so it winds up east of its target.
               iv. Any horizontally-moving object moving toward the equator 
                   starts out with the relatively slower linear speed of its 
                   origin, which means that it is moving eastward more and 
                   more slowly relative to the lower latitudes through which 
                   it passes:  It winds up west of its target.
                v. It gets a little gnarlier explaining why objects moving 
                   east or west ALSO deflect.  It has to do with centripetal 
                   acceleration.  If the object is going too fast with respect 
                   to the rotation of the globe, it tries to move to a higher 
                   "orbit," if you will, to a region moving faster.  If it's 
                   going too slow with respect to the spinning globe, it tries 
                   to "fall" to a region with a slower, more compatible speed.
                   a. By moving east, a horizontally-moving object is now 
                      going faster than the rotation of the earth, so it tries 
                      to move towards the equator, which is moving faster.
                   b. By moving west, the object is now going more slowly than 
                      the earth is, so it tries to move towards the pole, 
                      where speeds are lower and lower (and 0 km/h at the 
                      pole).
               vi. The Coriolis Effect is zero for objects moving east and 
                   west along the equator:  There's no place farther on the 
                   earth with a higher speed to go for the eastbound object, 
                   and the equator divides the Southern Hemisphere with its 
                   left hand deflection from the Northern Hemisphere with its 
                   right hand deflection, so there's no basis for a westbound 
                   moving object to make a "decision" about where to "fall."   
              vii. If the explanation mystifies you, just memorize that 
                   horizontally-moving objects (e.g., winds) in the Northern 
                   Hemisphere are deflected off course to their right and 
                   those in the Southern Hemisphere are deflected off course 
                   to their left.
             viii. Coriolis Effect is zero at the equator and becomes 
                   progressively stronger as you approach the poles.
               ix. It is stronger the faster the motion involved and the 
                   greater the distance of travel.
           g. You can perform an experiment in the privacy of your dwelling 
              unit to become a true geonerd (and demonstrate Coriolis Effect 
              in a very graphic way).  You'll need a friend, a pizza, a stick, 
              and a nail.  After sharing the pizza with your pal and lab 
              assistant (Igor), save the circular cardboard platter the pizza 
              came in.  You may need to clean it off a bit to make it 
              serviceable....  Make a hole right in the middle a bit wider 
              than the stick.  Have Igor stick the stick in it and press it 
              firmly against your table top.  You grab the nail and have Igor 
              spin the pizza platter (while s/he is holding the central axis, 
              of course) and keep it spinning.  Now, compose yourself and use 
              the nail to scratch a line on the spinning platter, drawing the 
              nail toward you in as straight a line as possible.  You saw it, 
              and Igor saw it:  You drew a straight line.  When Igor stops 
              spinning the platter, though, what will that line look like?  
              It'll spiral, exhibiting the apparent deflection of Coriolis 
              Effect.  Cool, eh?  So, the actual, absolute path is straight, 
              but it describes a spiraling path on the rotating object.  
              That's the essence of Coriolis Effect!  Each hemisphere of the 
              earth is kind of like a 3-d pizza platter for the purposes of 
              Coriolis Effect.
        4. So what does all this have to do with winds?  Well, once a wind 
           begins to move, it is affected by four things:
           a. The pressure gradient force (the pressure difference divided by 
              the distance between the high and low) determines its speed of 
              flow from the high to the low and the direction for which it 
              aims.
           b. The Coriolis Effect, which distorts its path and actually 
              balances and cancels out the net effect of the pressure gradient 
              force at high enough speeds.
           c. Frictional resistance to its flow. 
           d. Centrifugal force due to bends in the isobars around the highs 
              and lows (isobars tend to form concentric circles defining peaks 
              and pits of air pressure).
           e. These act in contradictory manners:
                i. The pressure gradient force moves at right angles to the 
                   isobars.
               ii. Coriolis Effect acts at right angles to the direction of 
                   movement (parallel to the isobars here):  to the right in 
                   the Northern Hemisphere and to the left in the Southern 
                   Hemisphere.
              iii. Friction opposes motion, slows it down, so it acts in the 
                   direction opposite the motion; it significantly slows winds 
                   (and, therefore, weakens Coriolis Effect) within about a 
                   kilometer of the surface.
               iv. Centrifugal force acts against the pressure gradient force 
                   but it is in dynamic balance with it: if it weakens, the 
                   pressure gradient force strengths and vice-versa.  
           f. Let's start with the simplest situation and understand the 
              balance of forces there, then gradually bring in complications.  
              Let's start with the balance of forces on air aloft, more than a 
              kilometer up above a flat countryside like much of the American 
              Midwest.  Up here, there's no frictional resistance from the 
              ground to slow down the wind, so it can really boogie up there.  
              Let's say, further, that the isobars in the region happen to 
              form straight lines between the regional high and the regional 
              low on that day.
                i. The wind will start to flow in response to the pressure 
                   gradient force from high to low, crossing the isobars at 
                   right angles to do so.
               ii. As they move faster and faster, though, Coriolis Effect 
                   kicks in and directly opposes the pressure gradient force.  
                   At this altitude and at high speeds, the two forces cancel
                   out their net effects (toward the low and away from the 
                   low).
              iii. This means that the wind, caught between these two opposing 
                   forces, flows ALONG the isobars, parallel to them!
               iv. Such winds aloft flowing parallel to straight isobars, 
                   balanced exactly between the pressure gradient force and 
                   the Coriolis Effect, are called "geostrophic winds."
           g. Now, let's muddy the picture a bit:  Let's permit the isobars to 
              bend around, the way they usually do, to enclose the high and 
              the low in concentric circles.  This introduces centrifugal 
              force.
                i. The geostrophic wind "wants" to run in a straight line, 
                   along the isobars, but now the isobars are themselves bent.
               ii. So, the winds are rotating around the high and the low.
              iii. This means that the wind tends to drive outward away from 
                   the low and the high:  centrifugal force.
               iv. Winds rotating around the low respond to centrifugal force, 
                   which in this case means in the same direction as the 
                   Coriolis Effect. To preserve the balance, Coriolis Effect 
                   slackens, which allows the pressure gradient force to 
                   strengthen, which pushes the air back on a path paralleling 
                   the isobars!
                v. Winds rotating around the high also respond to centrifugal 
                   force, moving away from the high and thus in the same 
                   direction as the pressure gradient force.  The PGF slackens 
                   now, which strengthens Coriolis Effect, which redirects the 
                   wind back onto a path parallel to the isobars!
               vi. So the wind is not really geostrophic anymore, not 
                   technically, but the air is still flowing parallel to the 
                   isobars:  Such a wind is called a "gradient wind."
              vii. If my explanation leaves you sputtering, have a look at a 
                   great site with really effective animations to illustrate 
                   all this by clicking here
           h. Now, let's come closer to Earth and consider the situation 
              underneath these balanced geostrophic and gradient winds.  
              Closer to the surface of the earth, the air flow is more and 
              more affected by surface roughness and the resulting frictional 
              resistance.
                i. Frictional resistance slows the winds.
               ii. This weakens Coriolis Effect.
              iii. The balance of power between the two opposing forces now 
                   shifts towards the pressure gradient force.
               iv. The wind now is able to cross the isobars and actually 
                   spiral in towards the low and out of the high.  Because 
                   Coriolis Effect is still present, though weakened, the wind 
                   cannot cross the isobars at right angles the way the 
                   pressure gradient force would "like."  It crosses them, 
                   deflected some 15-30 degrees (depending on latitude and 
                   wind speed).
           i. The resulting spirals are opposite one another in the northern 
              and the southern hemispheres:
                i. In the Northern Hemisphere, winds spiral CLOCKWISE out of a 
                   high and COUNTERCLOCKWISE into a low.
               ii. In the Southern Hemisphere, winds spiral COUNTERCLOCKWISE 
                   out of a high and CLOCKWISE into a low.
              iii. It is very important to remember these: They're confusing.
        5. Winds are named for the horizontal direction FROM which they blow, 
           not the direction TOWARDS which they blow:
           a. A westbound wind, then, is an east wind.
           b. A "Nor'easter" blows from the northeast to the southwest.
           c. The Prevailing Westerlies blow from the west to the east.
           d. The Polar Easterlies blow from the east to the west.
           e. A sea breeze blows onshore from the sea.
           f. A land breeze blows offshore from the land.
           g. Just to make your lives miserable, however, this applies to 
              horizontal airflow, not vertical airflow:  An upslope breeze is 
              moving up and a downslope breeze is moving down.
        6. The Buys-Ballot Law is kind of neat.  It takes into account 
           Coriolis Effect, the pressure gradient force, and friction to 
           predict where the wind is coming from.  If you're in the Northern 
           Hemisphere and you put your back to the wind, the low from which 
           the wind is coming is to your left and the high towards which it's 
           blowing is on your right.  In the Southern Hemisphere, it's exactly 
           the opposite:  I've heard it summarized as 3-L there:  Look into 
           the wind, the Low from which the wind is coming is on your Left. 
           The 3-L approach, of course, is only valid in the Southern 
           Hemisphere.  Oh, I don't expect you to memorize this:  It's just 
           kind of cool and might help you break the ice at a party!
     H. The global-scale pressure and wind pattern does tend to show some 
        predictable regularities.  In order to make sense of these, I'll again 
        follow a style of exposition, in which I'll present an analysis of the 
        patterns in as simple a circumstance as possible and then gradually 
        add in "grubby reality" factors at a pace we can handle.
        1. This style of thinking is characteristic of the scientific method, 
           by the way:  Scientists tend to proceed by analyzing the things 
           they're interested in by isolating them from complications and 
           forming laws that explain their behavior in isolation.  Then, once 
           we think we have it down, we then gradually synthesize more and 
           more real world factors into the simple model to make it more 
           comprehensive while still preserving the essence of what we learned 
           during the analytic phase.  We tend to admire best those models, 
           which cover the widest array of observations with the fewest and 
           simplest assumptions:  This is what we call "elegance," "economy," 
           or "parsimony" in explanation.
        2. Anyhow, for this presentation, I'll create an ideal world by making 
           two simplifying assumptions (to get rid of complications we'll deal 
           with later):   
           a. First, let's simplify away the continents (yow!):  Instant 
              "Waterworld."  Why on Earth would we do something so ridiculous?  
              Think back a bit to the last lecture, about the differential 
              response of land and sea to heat energy inputs.  Land and sea 
              have different specific heats, heating and cooling at different 
              rates.  You can see, from earlier in this lecture, that this 
              would screw up pressure patterns by creating different 
              temperature zones at the same latitudes. So, let's not go there 
              just yet.  
           b. Second, let's throw out the tilt in the earth's axis of 
              rotation. Whatever for?  So we can avoid dealing with 
              seasonality and the migration of the direct ray of the sun into 
              one hemisphere and then the other.  We have enough on our plates 
              as it is for now.
        3. On such a "perfect," simple, ideal world, we would see the 
           following patterns of alternating high and low pressure bands and 
           winds in between them:

           [ ideal pressure and wind belts on oceanic world with no 
axial tilt, from New Media Studio]

           a. Let's deal with the pressure bands first.
                i. Along the equator, you'll notice an area called the 
                   "Intertropical Convergence Zone" (or ITCZ to its friends). 
                   This area is also called the "Equatorial Low.  It is an 
                   area of chronic low pressure, created by the uplift of air 
                   by the concentrated heating below the direct ray of the 
                   sun.  It's called the ITCZ, too, because the tropical Trade 
                   Winds converge in this area to be uplifted by concentrated 
                   equatorial heating (more on the Trades in a bit).  Because 
                   the airflow here is vertical (convection, assisted by 
                   convergence), there is no wind here (no horizontal 
                   advection).  This meant that in the early days of 
                   colonialism, sailing ships were often becalmed in these 
                   waters, a very depressing situation, so this area is also 
                   called the "Doldrums."
               ii. Up around 30° N or S, you'll see an area labelled the 
                   "Subtropical High."  This is an area of subsidence, the 
                   downward movement that balances upward equatorial 
                   convection.  Remember in the previous lecture how I 
                   stressed that descending air never precipitates and that it 
                   warms adiabatically, which lowers its relative humidity?  
                   Well, the Subtropical High is what accounts for the Sahara 
                   and similar deserts (which you'll notice tend to be around 
                   30° N and S on the west coasts of landmasses).  Okay.  
                   It's bone dry here.  And again the air movement is 
                   vertical.  No wind. This helps us understand yet another 
                   name for the region, which also dates from early 
                   imperialism and sailing ships:  The "Horse Latitudes."  
                   Ships were becalmed here, too, but this was more than 
                   depressing, this was very, very life-threatening, because 
                   the crews could exhaust their fresh water supplies while 
                   waiting for a breeze.  Well, one of the weapons the 
                   Europeans used to conquer and rule the New World was ... 
                   horses.  Horses drink a LOT of water.  Especially when it's 
                   as hot and dry as the Sahara on board ship.  So, the 
                   sailors would often be forced into making the soldiers' 
                   horses "walk the gangplank."  It was such a common sight 
                   then to see bloated horse corpses floating in these waters 
                   that this pressure belt came to be called the Horse 
                   Latitudes.  Will this tidbit make you popular at parties!
              iii. Looking still higher, you'll notice another pressure band 
                   around 60° N or S:  The Subpolar Low.  This is an area 
                   where two more wind systems converge (the Prevailing 
                   Westerlies and the Polar Easterlies).  When air converges, 
                   it has nowhere else to go but up.  So, again, you get an 
                   area of vertical airflow, rising here, just as we saw along 
                   the equator.  This is an area of powerful uplift and 
                   condensation/freezing and storminess (we'll see later that 
                   most of our winter storms are spawned in this pressure 
                   belt.  No cutesy names from the old days of empire and 
                   sailing ships for you, though.
               iv. Last of all, above the north and south poles, at 90° N 
                   or S, we have the Polar High.  Air is so badly chilled here 
                   that it subsides, again creating an area of vertical 
                   airflow, downward again, like the Horse Latitudes.  This, 
                   too, is extremely dry air, dry because of the downward 
                   movement and also dry because of the extreme cold 
                   (remember, cold air cannot contain much water vapor).  
                   Greenland and Antarctica are polar deserts.  They don't get 
                   much precipitation but what falls doesn't melt:  It's 
                   accumulated to 2 and 3 km in places over thousands of 
                   years! 
           b. Now, about those wind belts.
                i. First, between the Subtropical High and the Equatorial Low 
                   lie the Trade Winds.  These blow toward the ITCZ and are 
                   slightly deflected by the Coriolis Effect at the surface.  
                   So, they have a slight easterly bias.  So the ones in the 
                   Northern Hemisphere are called the Northeast Trades, and 
                   the ones in the Southern Hemisphere are called the 
                   Southeast Trades.  Talk about euphemism!  "Trade" -- that's 
                   what they called the conquest of the New World, plundering 
                   of its empires' riches and their use to finance the 
                   takeover of much of the rest of the Old World.  Orwellian 
                   language goes back long before George Orwell!
               ii. Second, you'll notice the Westerlies or the Prevailing 
                   Westerlies blowing from the Subtropical High to the 
                   Subpolar Low in each hemisphere.  Being at a higher 
                   latitude, they are more strongly affected by Coriolis 
                   Effect and have a marked westerlies bias.  "Prevailing" 
                   means that, in this area, the prevailing or most common 
                   direction of the wind is from the west.
              iii. Third, blowing from the Polar High to the Subpolar Low 
                   (where they converge into the Prevailing Westerlies) are 
                   the Polar Easterlies.  These guys are REALLY strongly 
                   biased from the east, and they are generally very fast-
                   moving winds.
        4. The mechanism behind this pattern of alternating pressure bands and 
           wind systems in between them is essentially a convection engine, 
           distorted by Coriolis Effect.  George Hadley is the fellow who 
           figured this out, back in 1735!
           a. Heat is absorbed in greatest concentration along the equator, 
              which produces convectional uplift, which accounts for the 
              Equatorial Low.
           b. The air in the upper troposphere chills as it climbs, but it 
              cannot sink over the air rising below it, so it spreads out and 
              drifts towards the poles.  The air flow, distorted by the 
              Coriolis Effect, flows from west to east, accumulating around 
              30° N or S.  This constant accumulation of air in the upper 
              troposphere becomes a great river of air, the subtropical jet 
              stream, some of which "leaks" downward, subsiding to the surface 
              to form the Subtropical High.
           c. At the surface, some of the air subsiding over 30° N and S, 
              flows towards the equator as the Trade Winds (with their slight 
              Coriolis defletion).  Some of it goes the other way, toward the 
              poles, becoming the Prevailing Westerlies (with their stronger 
              Coriolis deflection).
           d. Meanwhile, back up at the north and south poles, the intensely 
              chilled air contracts (remember the gas laws from the last 
              lecture), becomes more dense, and subsides to form the Polar 
              High.
           e. Air is pushed out from under that high towards the equator, very 
              strongly affected by Coriolis Effect:  These are the Polar 
              Easterlies.
           f. The Polar Easterlies collide with the Prevailing Westerlies 
              around 60° N and S, which creates convergent uplift and the 
              Subpolar Low.  Above the Subpolar Low is the "polar jet stream," 
              the first jet stream to be discovered. It is a current of very 
              fast flowing air about 10 km above the Subpolar Low, supplied by 
              the uplifted air from that low.  
                i. This current flows from west to east somewhere between 100 
                   to 200 km/h.  
               ii. This current affects air traffic ("jet" stream):  It takes 
                   less time to fly from west to east than from east to west.  
                   Going east, the jet stream is a tailwind and speeds you on 
                   your way; going back west, it's a headwind and it delays 
                   you about an hour from the East Coast to the West Coast.  
              iii. This jet stream is also important because it affects the 
                   track of our winter storms, more about which later.
        5. Let's bring some "grubby reality" back into this model, folks.  
           Let's allow the planet to resume its tilt of 23½° from 
           the vertical of the plane of ecliptic.  This means the declination 
           of the direct ray of the sun can now move from 23½° N in 
           June to 23½° S in December.  Let the seasons begin!
           a. As the declination of the sun migrates into the Northern 
              Hemisphere, the whole world pressure and wind system shifts 
              north, following its power source.  Each band shifts north. 
              Those in the Northern Hemisphere are compressed latitudinally, 
              while those in the Southern Hemisphere expand latitudinally.
           b. The exact opposite happens when the system follows its power 
              source into the Southern Hemisphere.
           c. An apt physical analogy would be holding a glass pot filled with 
              water (and some glitter or pepper to make this visible) over a 
              candle until a convection cell develops, rising over the candle 
              and sinking along the sides.  Move the candle around a bit, and 
              you'll see the convectional uplift move with it.
           d. There are many two-season climates in the world strongly 
              affected by the movement of the world pressure and wind belts 
              north and south each year.
                i. West Africa and other tropical wet-and-dry climates are 
                   covered by the Subtropical High when it shifts south in the 
                   Northern Hemisphere winter, giving it a hot, dry winter.  
                   The movement of the ITCZ north in summer brings it a rainy, 
                   warm summer.
               ii. Southern California and other Mediterranean climates are 
                   covered by the Subtropical High in the summer when it moves 
                   poleward of its customary 30° N (and S) position, 
                   giving us our hot, dry summer so reminiscent of West 
                   Africa's winter.  Comes winter, and we are affected by the 
                   Westerlies and the Subpolar Low and its storminess.
        6. Now, let's relax the second simplifying assumption and let there be 
           land.  Pretty impressive, huh? This means we have to deal with the 
           different specific heats of land and water, land heating up and 
           cooling down a lot faster than oceans adjacent. This sets up 
           intense pressure gradients from land to sea, which introduces a 
           longitudinal factor cutting across the latitudinal world pressure 
           and wind belts.
           a. This particularly affects the Northern Hemisphere. Anyone want 
              to hazard a guess why?  Hint:

              [ Mollweide equal area map of the world ]

           b. So, I'll focus on the Northern Hemisphere here.             
           c. The Northern Hemisphere summer produces heating and convectional 
              uplift over the North American and Eurasian landmasses, which 
              produces low pressure areas right where you'd expect the 
              Subtropical High to be at that time of year.
                i. This breaks up the Subtropical High into two oceanic cells 
                   or concentrated peaks of high pressure, with steep pressure 
                   gradients on all sides of the central peaks (not just north 
                   and south).
                   a. The one in the Pacific is called the "Hawai'ian High."
                   b. The one in the Atlantic is called either the "Azores 
                      High" or the "Bermudas High."
               ii. This breakup and consequent concentration of high pressure 
                   strengthens its impact on weather:  There's a steep 
                   longitudinal pressure gradient between land and sea.  This 
                   accelerates air flow out of these oceanic highs.
              iii. This produces very different summer weather patterns on the 
                   west coasts and the east coasts of continents, however, 
                   because of ocean currents.  Hunh?  Ocean currents?  I 
                   thought we were talking about weather!
                   a. Yep.  Ocean currents.  On p. 58 of your textbook, you'll 
                      see a map with warm currents shown with black lines and 
                      cold currents with white lines.  Look at the east coast 
                      of North America -- warm current (Gulf Stream).  Look at 
                      the east coast of Asia -- warm current (Kuroshio or 
                      Japan Current).  Now, have a gander at the west coast of 
                      North America -- COLD current (California Current) -- 
                      which never fails to surprise visitors from Back East 
                      who want to jump into the Pacific!  How about the west 
                      coast of Europe and North Africa -- yep, another cold 
                      current (Canaries Current).
                   b. So, when the Bermudas High builds up into a concentrated 
                      peak of high pressure, winds spiral (clockwise) out of 
                      it ... and right across the warm Gulf Stream.  Passing 
                      over the warm ocean water, this wind evaporates a lot of 
                      water vapor into itself and schleps it right onto the 
                      American South and East.  That's why summer there is so 
                      sticky and hot and why it rains constantly!
                   c. When the Hawai'ian High puffs up into a concentrated 
                      peak of high pressure, it, too, sends winds spiralling 
                      clockwise out of it in all directions.  But the air that 
                      comes to California passes over that cold California 
                      Current bringing water down from the North Pacific.  
                      Little water will evaporate into it, so it's drier. In 
                      fact, the air may be chilled by conduction and radiation 
                      below its dew point out at sea, forming those huge fog 
                      banks you see building out there in the summer (and our 
                      marine layer along the coast in June).  The air is 
                      drier, and that partially explains our long hot dry 
                      summer in California (and other Mediterranean climates 
                      around the world).  Sometimes, too, the subsidence of 
                      the Hawai'ian High moves over us, bringing warm air down 
                      from above, and that's when we really bake here.  That 
                      subsidence also creates a huge regional inversion layer, 
                      too, and that's the summer inversion that gives us that 
                      awful summer smog season here.
           d. Meanwhile, during the Northern Hemisphere summer up at the 
              Subpolar Low, the land at that latitude is also warming up (yes, 
              it does get warm in Canada, believe it or not).  This means that 
              there is uplift and low pressure over land.  This is not too 
              remarkable, since there normally is uplift and low pressure at 
              this latitude.  In other words, there isn't all that much 
              contrast between land and sea in air pressure at this latitude, 
              the way there is farther south.  
                i. So the Subpolar Low remains connected over land in summer, 
                   with relatively little land and sea differential.
               ii. The low pressure remains smeared out in a band with a 
                   pressure gradient only going north and south.
              iii. This means the influence of the Subpolar Low declines in 
                   summer, and it, therefore, generates fewer storms.
           e. The Northern Hemisphere winter produces opposite results. Now, 
              the North American and Eurasian landmasses cool and up at 
              60° N, it's awfully cold.  Cold air subsides, producing a 
              high pressure area over Canada, Northern Europe, and Siberia.  
              Now, it's the Subpolar Low's turn to be broken up into two 
              oceanic cells.
                i. The North Pacific one is called the "Aleutian Low" (you've 
                   heard the weathercasters mention that, I bet).
               ii. The one in the North Atlantic is called the "Icelandic 
                   Low." 
              iii. Being broken into two oceanic cells means there is now a 
                   strong, steep pressure gradient between land and sea at 
                   this latitude, which forms two concentrated, deep pits of 
                   pressure out at sea.  Each one really sucks air into it 
                   fast, which creates convergent uplift and triggers storms, 
                   which then track eastbound across the northern landmasses, 
                   pulled along by the Polar Jet Stream. So, the influence of 
                   the Subpolar Low on weather is profoundly strengthened by 
                   being broken into two concentrated pressure pits out at 
                   sea.  
           f. Further south, meanwhile, the cooling of the land mass in winter 
              allows more subsidence over land, which permits the Subtropical 
              High to re-extend itself over the land.  This smears the high 
              pressure back into a latitudinal, non-focussed band, as opposed 
              to a sharp peak out at sea.  This reduction in the land and sea 
              contrast at this latitude during the winter reduces the 
              significance of the Subtropical High on the winter weather.  We 
              in Southern California experience the southern movement and 
              weakening of the high pressure as the loss of our protection 
              from Aleutian storms, which give us our rainy winter.
     I. Not all wind and pressure operate at the global scale.  There are 
        regional and local scale wind and pressure systems, too.
        1. Continental wind systems are called "monsoons."  
           a. These are seasonally-reversing winds.
           b. They are related to the different specific heats of land and 
              sea, much like the material just discussed, so I'll try to be 
              brief.  
           c. Nice geotrivia first:  The differential heating of land and sea 
              was first proposed as an explanation for monsoonal circulation 
              by Edmund Halley (of Halley's Comet fame) back in 1686. Oh, he 
              preferred to be called "HAH-lee" as opposed to "HAY-lee" as we 
              usually hear it pronounced.
           d. In the summer, the land heats up and develops a low pressure 
              area.  The surrounding sea lags in heating, so it remains cooler 
              and develops a relative high pressure area.  The result is an 
              onshore monsoon, which brings rainy summers.  Where the land 
              mass is especially huge (Asia), the monsoon can be REALLY rainy.
           e. In the winter, the land cools down quickly, developing a 
              regional high, while the sea remains relatively warm, developing 
              a regional low.  The result is an offshore flow, a land wind, 
              which brings drier conditions.  
                i. In a manner of speaking, our Santa Ana winds are triggered 
                   by this process, so we get to participate in part of the 
                   monsoonal circulation on our continent.
               ii. The winter monsoon is really well developed in the gigantic 
                   Eurasian landmass, but it is present in North America as 
                   those polar Canadian winds that rush down the Mississippi 
                   plains right into the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean.
        2. Then, there are local breeze systems.  They are really local, 
           affecting no more than a couple kilometers at best, and they are 
           diurnally-reversing, which means they change direction from night 
           to day.
           a. Land and sea breezes.
                i. These are mechanically similar to monsoons, but they're 
                   very small scale and diurnally-reversing, where the monsoon 
                   is contintental scale and seasonally-reversing.
               ii. In the day, the land heats up, creating a very local low. 
                   The sea is cooler and has relatively high pressure 
                   offshore.  This draws a sea breeze onshore, best developed 
                   in the mid to late afternoon (the only reason Miami and 
                   Chicago are humanly habitable in the summer!).
              iii. At night, the land quickly loses its heat, which results in 
                   a local high.  The water, however, loses its heat more 
                   slowly, which results in uplift and a local low pressure 
                   area.  This means that the breeze reverses itself, and you 
                   now have a landbreeze blowing offshore in the wee hours.
   
                   DAY    <-\-----             NIGHT ----\--->      
                            /                            /           
                     land   \  sea                land   \  sea      
                            |                            |           
                     heats  |  cool               cools  |  warm     
                            \                            \           
                       L  <-|--- H                  H ---|--> L      
                            /                            /   

           b. Upslope/downslope breezes.
                i. These are associated with the cold air drainage that 
                   produces inversion layers.  On a slope, the formation and 
                   sloughing off of cold air creates a downslope breeze.
               ii. During the day, the land heats rapidly, but the peaks are 
                   likely to respond to the sun first, because the cold air 
                   layer is thinnest there.  This creates a small low pressure 
                   area on top of the hills.  Pretty soon convection begins to 
                   mix up the inversion layer, and some of that uplift will be 
                   drawn to those peaks, creating an upslope breeze.
              iii. This kind of micro-breeze system is important for 
                   firefighters to understand, as fire will tend to move 
                   downslope a little faster at night and upslope a little 
                   faster in the day time.
   

Well, that's another lecture in the hamper, folks.  Come away familiar with 
the different ways air pressure is expressed (units of mercury, weight, force, 
and that millibars and hectoPascals are the same thing).  Be very clear on 
isobar maps and how to interpret them.  Understand the basic mechanics of air 
transfer and what Coriolis Effect is and how wind maintains a balancing act 
among the pressure gradient force, Coriolis Effect, friction, and centrifugal 
force.  Know what a geostrophic and a gradient wind are and why we don't 
experience them at the surface.  Know that winds are named for the direction 
from which they blow (in general).  Memorize the global pressure and wind 
pattern and its explanation, as well as how seasonality and the differential 
specific heats of land and ocean affect it.  Be able to explain the mechanisms 
among seasonally-reversing continental-scale winds (monsoons) and diurnally-
reversing local-scale breezes.

The next lecture will examine moisture in more detail as an element of weather 
in the troposphere.

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Document and © maintained by Dr. Rodrigue
First placed on web: 10/15/00
Last revised: 06/19/07

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