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Chapter 17 7th es

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Page 2: Chapter 17 7th es

AIR MASSES• A large body of air (thousands

of miles)

• Changes in weather are caused by movements of air masses

• As an air mass moves away, temp & humidity change.

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Classification•Air masses are named from the area where they come from.

• Classified according to : temperature & moisture content.

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• Tropical- HOT air mass formed in tropics

• Polar- COLD air mass formed near poles

• Maritime- air mass formed over oceans, WET

• Continental- air mass formed over land, DRY

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TYPES OF AIR MASSES1. MARITIME TROPICAL

2. MARITIME POLAR

3. CONTINENTAL POLAR

4. CONTINENTAL TROPICAL

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Warm, humid air mass formed over ocean near equator.

Summer = hot humid weather

Winter = heavy rain/snowfall

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Cool, humid air masses formed over ocean near poles

Summer = cool temps, fog, rain

Winter = snow, cold temps

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• Hot, dry air masses formed mostly in the summer over dry lands of SW & N Mexico.

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Large, cold air mass formed over land in Canada & Alaska.

Winter- extremely cold, dry air.

Summer- cold, dry air temps

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• Prevailing Westerlies push air masses west to east.

• Jet Stream- blow west to east

• Fronts- boundaries between air masses, changeable weather & storms develop along fronts.

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Chapter 17 Lesson 1Reviewpage 581

• What are the two characteristics of an air mass that you need to know in order to classify it?

• What happens when a warmer air mass pushes a cooler air mass?

• What type of weather system brings calm, clear weather?

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• Colliding air masses can form 4 types of fronts:

1. Cold fronts 2. Warm fronts

3. Stationary fronts

4. Occluded fronts

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• forms when a cold air mass meets & pushes under a warm air mass.

• Warm air cools, clouds form, & heavy rain. (thunderstorms).

• cool weather

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• Forms when a warm air mass moves over a cold air mass.

• Rain showers then hot, humid weather.

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• Warm air mass meets a cold air mass & no movement occurs. Produces rain & clouds.

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• When a warm air mass is caught between 2 colder air masses. Warm air cut off.

• Produces clouds, rain/snow.

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STORM

•A violent disturbance in the atmosphere

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• A small storm often accompanied with heavy precipitation & thunder & lightning.

• Form in large cumulonimbus clouds called thunderheads.

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• On hot, humid days, warm air rises rapidly, & cools forming cumulonimbus clouds.

• This movement of air creates updraft & downdraft winds.

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Areas of (+)/(-) charges build up in storm clouds. It is a sudden discharge of electricity between 2 clouds or the cloud and the ground. Electric energy is released.

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Light travels faster than sound. Lightning heats air. Heated air expands rapidly which results in sound waves (thunder).

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T-Storm Damage• Heavy rains which can lead

to floods.

• Lightning, Hail, & winds can cause damage.

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• Whirling, funnel shaped cloud that reaches down from a storm cloud to touch earth’s surface.

• Warmth & Moisture feed it• Season: late spring/early

summer

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• Warm, humid air meets cold, dry air. A squall line of thunderstorms develop which can develop into a tornado.

• Warm air rises rapidly & begins to rotate. The cloud will then start to descend to earth in a funnel.

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• Tornadoes are ranked on the Fujita Scale (by the amount of damage they cause.)

• F0 light damage to F5 extreme damage.

• F4 F5 tornadoes account for only 1% of all tornadoes.

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• A tropical cyclone that has winds of 119kmh or higher.

• Forms in the Atlantic, Pacific, & Indian Oceans. In western Pacific- typhoons.

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• It draws energy from warm, humid air at ocean’s surface.

• Warm air rises to form clouds, more air is drawn into the system.

• Storms bands, high winds, & heavy rains spiral around a center.

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• Cold, dry air moves across warmer water picking up water vapor & heat from the water. Once the air reaches the other side of the lake, air condenses & falls as snow.

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• In New York, Buffalo & Rochester are 2 of the snowiest cities in the US because of Lake-Effect Snow.

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Snowstorm Safety• Find shelter from the wind.

• It can be dangerous because high winds/snow limit your vision so you can get lost easily & you can lose a lot of body heat out in the cold.

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Meteorologists• Scientists who study the causes

of weather & try to predict it.

• Meteorologists use maps, charts, & computers to analyze weather & prepare weather forecasts.

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• Lines joining places that have the same temps.

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• Lines joining areas with the same air pressure.

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TECHNOLOGY• Has improved the accuracy of

weather forecasts.• Weather balloons carry

instruments into the troposphere & stratosphere to measure temp., air pressure, & humidity.

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• Weather Satellites- orbit earth in the thermosphere, cameras make images of the earth’s surface, clouds, & storms which get sent to meteorologists to analyze.

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• Computer Forecasts- gathers weather data from a large area then the computer works through thousands of calculations using equations from weather models to make forecasts for 12, 24, & 36 hours. Each one builds on the previous forecasts.