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Lecture 7 • Forces (gravity, pressure gradient force) • Imaginary forces (Coriolis, centrifugal) • Force balance and resulting horiz. wind • Geostrophic wind • Gradient wind • Adjustment to balance • The thermal “wind” (change in geostrophic wind in the vertical)

Lecture 7

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Lecture 7. Forces (gravity, pressure gradient force) Imaginary forces (Coriolis, centrifugal) Force balance and resulting horiz. wind Geostrophic wind Gradient wind Adjustment to balance The thermal “wind” (change in geostrophic wind in the vertical). - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Lecture 7

Lecture 7

• Forces (gravity, pressure gradient force)• Imaginary forces (Coriolis, centrifugal)• Force balance and resulting horiz. wind• Geostrophic wind• Gradient wind• Adjustment to balance• The thermal “wind” (change in geostrophic

wind in the vertical)

Page 2: Lecture 7

Wind direction is the direction from which the wind is blowing. Wind direction is expressed in

degrees

Wind speed is expressed in terms of the flagpole

Units: m/s or knots

1 knot = 0.5 m/s

1knot ~ 1 mile/hr

Page 3: Lecture 7

Newton’s law of motion

• A body at rest tends to stay at rest; a body in motion tends to stay in motion, traveling at a constant speed in a straight line.

• A force exerted on a body of mass m causes the body to accelerate in the direction of the applied force.

Force = mass x acceleration

Page 4: Lecture 7

A force has direction and magnitude (it is a vector). Adding two forces is vector addition.

Page 5: Lecture 7

Forces that move the air

• Gravitational force (g=9.8 m/s2)

• Pressure gradient force (-1/rho x dp/dx or --1/rho x dp/dy). It points toward lower p. The pressure gradients causing the wind are horizontal.

• Coriolis force

• Centrifugal force

• Frictional force

Page 6: Lecture 7

Pressure gradient force pushes from higher to lower pressures

Magnitude depends on value of pressure gradient

PGF

Page 7: Lecture 7

Isobaric chart (height contours on a constant pressure surface)

Page 8: Lecture 7

Pressure (p) as a function of height

Page 9: Lecture 7

Vertical structure in the atmosphere

• What about pressure?• Hydrostatic equation: balance between pressure gradient

force and gravity.– dp/dz = - rho g

• Ideal gas law:– p = rho R T

Let’s go to the board!

z = - H ln (p/p0), where H is scale height and is only constant if T is constant.In other words, p = p0 exp(- z/H)

Page 10: Lecture 7

Next: Coriolis forceEarth’s rotational speed is greatest at the

equator and exactly zero at the poles

Page 11: Lecture 7

Coriolis deflection

Coriolis force deflects moving air to the right in the Northern Hemisp.

Coriolis force deflects moving air to the left in the S. Hemisphere

Page 12: Lecture 7

The magnitude of the Coriolis force (CF) is proportional to the wind speed and sine of latitude

CF= f x V,Where f is2xEarth’s rotation rate xsin(latitude)

Page 13: Lecture 7

Centrifugal force: arises because the trajectory is curved. CENTF= V^2/R, where R (radius of curvature) is positive for cyclones,

negative for anticyclones

Page 14: Lecture 7

Frictional force is proportional to the wind- speed and directed opposite to the wind dir.

FF = -k V (where k describes the roughness)

Page 15: Lecture 7

Summary: The Forces

• Gravity – the strong silent type

• PGF arises from pressure gradients generated by differential solar heating –leads to wind. Only then do the other forces start acting.

• CF, CENTF, FF all depend of V, wind speed.

Page 16: Lecture 7

Atmospheric force balancesSum of forces = mass x acceleration

Balance when the forces add up to zero

• Hydrostatic balance in the vertical (gravity does not cause wind).

• Strong horizontal PGF means strong wind

• CF changes wind direction not speed

• CENTF only acts on curved flow

• FF slows down the wind (regardless of direction).

Page 17: Lecture 7

Geostrophic wind, geostrophic balancePGF + CF = 0

Page 18: Lecture 7

Wind blows counterclockwise around lows (cyclonic wind in cyclones), clockwise

around highs (anticyclones)

Force balance not quite right since we have curved flows

Add centrifugal force

Page 19: Lecture 7

Gradient balance and the gradient wind

Page 20: Lecture 7

Gradient balance results in gradient wind

• Represents balance of three forces

• It is an excellent approximation to free atmospheric flow.

• Around highs it is supergeostrophic

• Around lows it is subgeostrophic

Page 21: Lecture 7

Adjustment to balance

• The atmosphere tries hard to stay in balance, but it is constantly being pushed away from it.

• The atmosphere adjusts very quickly (in a matter of minutes) to imbalance.

Page 22: Lecture 7

Adjustment to balance with 3 forces: