Exercise 14 - Pg 203 Atmosphere and Moisture
3 Forms of Water
Three forms or phases - solid liquid, and gas.
It is still water; just in different phases.
Solid - Ice, Liquid - Water, Gas - Vapor
When a solid becomes a liquid heat is absorbed, and when a liquid becomes a gas even more heat has to be absorbed.
The opposite is true when a gas becomes a liquid heat is released, and when a liquid becomes solid.
SolidIce
LiquidWater
GasVapor
MeltsHeat Absorbed
80 Cal.
BoilsHeat Absorbed
600 Cal.
CondensesHeat Released
600 Cal.
FreezesHeat Released
80 Cal.
Deposition (G→S)680 Cal. Released
Sublimation (S→G)680 Cal. Absorbed
Water Vapor
Composes 2-3% of the gas in the atmosphere.
Responsible for all precipitation that occurs.
Also helps to heat the atmosphere.
All three occur in balance with each other.
This only applies to water.
This is how clouds form.
Water Vapor Capacity See chart on page 206
This is the amount of water the atmosphere can hold at a specific temperature.
As the temperature increases the amount of moisture that can be held increases.
This is because a gas contains a large amount of space between molecules.
Examples
Use chart page 206. This is not a linear relationship. 5OC = 5 g of moisture/1kg of air 10OC = 7g of moisture/1kg of air 40OC = 47g of moisture/1kg of air
Relative Humidity
Is a ratio of the amount of water vapor / the capacity of the at a specific temp X 100
This alone does not give an accurate indication of the amount of vapor in the air.
Any Percent = part over whole X 100
X100Capacity
ContentRH t
Determine the Relative Humidity
The Atmosphere is at a temp of 15OC, and contains 2g of water. From the chart pg 215; we know the maximum it can hold 10g.
20% X10010g/1kg
2g/1kgRH15
What temperature we are calculating
What is the RH of air at 25OC that contains 5g of water?
What is the RH of air at 5OC that contains 5g of water?
The RH is lower in the summer day. The amount of H20 is higher because the overall temperature of the atmosphere is higher.
25%X10020g/1Kg
5gRH25
Saturated 100%X1005g/1Kg
5gRH5
What’s going on?
As temperature decreases relative humidity increases. Why because colder air has less volume thus it takes less moisture to saturate the air.What happen when we get 100% saturation? CondensationThis is why grass is damp during early summer mornings…
How to measure Relative Humidity
Use pg 209
We use Sling psychrometer
We have 2 bulbs one wet and one dry.
This works on the process of evaporation.
The wet bulb pulls heat from the thermometer.
The greater the difference in temperature the lower the relative humidity.
The lower the RH the less saturated the atmosphere is.
Example # 1
Difference between wet and dry temp = 8OC
OC= 5/9(OF-32)
Wet temp = 55OF
C21C20.932709
5 F70 OOO
C13.0C12.6532559
5F55 OOO
Dry temp = 70OF
How to read the chart pg 209
Find dry bulb temp on left side. (21°C)
Find the difference between wet and dry across top. (8°C)
Connect both and where they meet is the Relative Humidity.
Note: If your exact temp is not on the chart round up.
Our example Relative Humidity is 40%
Dew Point Temperature
This is the temperature that the air has to be lowered to reach 100% saturation. This is when Relative Humidity = 100% or
when Content = Capacity.
Once this temperature is reached condensation occurs.
This is why a cold glass sweats.
Determining Dew Point Temperature
We know the wet and dry temperatures from the last example dry temp = 21°C, and wet temp =13°C.
Difference between temps = 8°C
Use the chart on page 210 to determine the dew point. We follow the line and we determine the dew
point is between 4 - 8 OC
What does this mean?
If we lower the temperature to the Dew Point Temperature then we would be at the saturation point.
How can this be done and what happens?
We will find out…
Adiabatic Process
A change in temperature occur due to changes in pressure of a gasAs a gas compresses it’s temperature increases.This is because as we compress the gas, the gas molecules bounce off each other more frequently causing temperature to increase. As a gas expands temperature decreases because the gas molecules have more room to move around and therefore collide less frequently. This is how refrigerators and air conditioners work.
How clouds form
Hot Air
Surface of the Earth
Cold Air Hot air is lighter than cold air.
So hot air travels up replacing cold air.
The hot air cools by expansion.
When the dew point is reached condensation occurs forming clouds.
Chapter Summary pg 219
Questions 1 – 4 & 6