Science - Chapter 9
Important terms:
humidity - the amount of water vapor in a given volume of air
dew point - the temperature at which condensation begins
cirrus - wispy, feathery clouds made of ice crystals that form at high levels
cumulus - fluffy, white clouds, usually with flat bottoms, that look like a rounded pile of cotton
stratus - clouds that form in flay layers and often cover much of the sky
air mass - a huge body of air that has similar temperature, humidity, and air pressure at any given height
front - the boundary where unlike air masses meet but do not mix
jet stream - bands of high-speed winds about 10 kilometers above the earth’s surface
hurricane - a tropical storm that has winds of about 119 kilometers per hour or higher
Meteorologists - scientists who study the causes of weather and try to predict it
isobar - a line on a weather map that joins places that have the same air pressure
isotherm - a line on a weather map that joins places that have the same temperature
Tiny particles of salt, dust, or smoke - what must be present for water
Cirrus clouds - wispy feathery clouds
Cirrus clouds - clouds made of ice crystals and indicate fair weather
Stratus clouds - clouds that form in flat layers
Stratus clouds - clouds that’s name is from the Latin word strato = spread out
Stratus clouds - clouds that usually cover the sky (cloudy)
Stratus clouds - As these clouds thicken they may produce drizzle, rain, or snow
Cumulus clouds - clouds that look like cotton
Cumulus clouds - these clouds when they’re short usually indicate fair weather
Cumulus clouds - towering clouds with flat tops that often produce thunderstorms
Altocumulus and altostratus - contain the prefix alto = high
Altocumulus and altostratus - are “medium-level” clouds
Altocumulus and altostratus - these clouds indicate precipitation
Cirrocumulus - these clouds indicate a storm is on its way
freezing rain, rain, snow, sleet, and hail - the types of precipitation
freezing rain - sometimes falls as liquid water but freezes when they touch a cold surface
rain - reaches earth as water
snow - reaches the earth as frozen water
sleet - sometimes snow that is melted or rain that refreezes as it falls
hail - reaches earth as ice pellets
Continental - overland
Maritime - overwater
tropical - close to the equator
polar - near the poles
arctic or antarctic - near colder region
Cold front - cold air moves under warm air
Warm front - warm air moves over cold
Occulted front - warm front caught between 2 cold fronts
Stationary front - when cold and warm fronts meet
How a hurricane begins - a low-pressure area over warm water, or tropical disturbance
what happens after there is a low-pressure area over warm water, or tropical disturbance - warm, humid air rises and begins to spiral
What happens after warm, humid air rises and begins to spiral - as the air rises warmer, moist air is drawn into the system, and the hurricane gains energy
what happens after moist air is drawn into the system and the hurricane gains energy - bands of high winds and heavy rains form as winds spiral inwards
Cyclone - when the boundary between fronts meets and become distorted; can cause the air to swirl, creating a low-pressure center
Important terms:
humidity - the amount of water vapor in a given volume of air
dew point - the temperature at which condensation begins
cirrus - wispy, feathery clouds made of ice crystals that form at high levels
cumulus - fluffy, white clouds, usually with flat bottoms, that look like a rounded pile of cotton
stratus - clouds that form in flay layers and often cover much of the sky
air mass - a huge body of air that has similar temperature, humidity, and air pressure at any given height
front - the boundary where unlike air masses meet but do not mix
jet stream - bands of high-speed winds about 10 kilometers above the earth’s surface
hurricane - a tropical storm that has winds of about 119 kilometers per hour or higher
Meteorologists - scientists who study the causes of weather and try to predict it
isobar - a line on a weather map that joins places that have the same air pressure
isotherm - a line on a weather map that joins places that have the same temperature
Tiny particles of salt, dust, or smoke - what must be present for water
Cirrus clouds - wispy feathery clouds
Cirrus clouds - clouds made of ice crystals and indicate fair weather
Stratus clouds - clouds that form in flat layers
Stratus clouds - clouds that’s name is from the Latin word strato = spread out
Stratus clouds - clouds that usually cover the sky (cloudy)
Stratus clouds - As these clouds thicken they may produce drizzle, rain, or snow
Cumulus clouds - clouds that look like cotton
Cumulus clouds - these clouds when they’re short usually indicate fair weather
Cumulus clouds - towering clouds with flat tops that often produce thunderstorms
Altocumulus and altostratus - contain the prefix alto = high
Altocumulus and altostratus - are “medium-level” clouds
Altocumulus and altostratus - these clouds indicate precipitation
Cirrocumulus - these clouds indicate a storm is on its way
freezing rain, rain, snow, sleet, and hail - the types of precipitation
freezing rain - sometimes falls as liquid water but freezes when they touch a cold surface
rain - reaches earth as water
snow - reaches the earth as frozen water
sleet - sometimes snow that is melted or rain that refreezes as it falls
hail - reaches earth as ice pellets
Continental - overland
Maritime - overwater
tropical - close to the equator
polar - near the poles
arctic or antarctic - near colder region
Cold front - cold air moves under warm air
Warm front - warm air moves over cold
Occulted front - warm front caught between 2 cold fronts
Stationary front - when cold and warm fronts meet
How a hurricane begins - a low-pressure area over warm water, or tropical disturbance
what happens after there is a low-pressure area over warm water, or tropical disturbance - warm, humid air rises and begins to spiral
What happens after warm, humid air rises and begins to spiral - as the air rises warmer, moist air is drawn into the system, and the hurricane gains energy
what happens after moist air is drawn into the system and the hurricane gains energy - bands of high winds and heavy rains form as winds spiral inwards
Cyclone - when the boundary between fronts meets and become distorted; can cause the air to swirl, creating a low-pressure center