Save
Atmosphere weeks 7 to 12
week 9
Save
Share
Learn
Content
Leaderboard
Share
Learn
Created by
berneen
Visit profile
Cards (56)
What are the two types of storms mentioned?
Frontal storms
and
convective storms
View source
What is the energy source for frontal storms?
Gradient in temperature
View source
What is the energy source for convective storms?
Release of latent heat
View source
How do mid-latitude frontal cyclones travel?
They travel with the
westerlies
View source
What happens when cold air advances faster than warm air?
It creates an
occluded front
View source
What type of air is needed for thunderstorms?
Warm, moist air
View source
What characterizes an air mass thunderstorm?
Unequal heating
of the surface
View source
What is a severe thunderstorm characterized by?
Unequal heating
or lift +
shear
View source
What drives hurricanes?
The
ocean's
heat
View source
What is the recipe for a hurricane?
Thunderstorm + converging air + ocean heat
View source
How long can hurricanes last?
A few days to a
month
View source
What are the main parts of this week's lecture structure?
Part I:
Monsoons
Tropical climates
Monsoon systems
Asian
monsoon case study
Part II:
El Niño
Southern Oscillation (
ENSO
)
Definition
Historical observations
Processes
Monitoring and predicting
Today's situation
Key concepts
View source
What does ENSO stand for?
El Niño
– Southern Oscillation
View source
What characterizes the ENSO warm phase (El Niño)?
Warmer than usual water in the
equatorial South Pacific
View source
What happens during the ENSO cool phase (La Niña)?
Cooler than normal water across the
equatorial
South Pacific
View source
Who identified the Southern Oscillation phenomenon?
Sir Gilbert Walker
View source
What is the periodicity of the ENSO oscillation?
Every
2 to 10 years
View source
What was Gilbert Walker's profession?
Physicist
and
statistician
View source
What was the impetus for Walker's research?
Monsoon failure in
1899
View source
What does the term 'El Niño' refer to?
Warm currents near
Peru
and
Ecuador
View source
What climate anomalies were observed in the 1970s?
Droughts
and
heavy rainfall
View source
What is the relationship between El Niño and the Southern Oscillation?
They are part of the same climate phenomena
View source
What drives the normal conditions in the ocean-atmosphere interaction?
Trade winds
and ocean circulation
View source
What is the role of the Walker circulation?
It involves
high
and
low
pressure with precipitation
View source
What is the primary productivity in the western Pacific warm pool?
High
productivity
View source
What is the significance of the thermocline in ocean-atmosphere interaction?
It separates warm
surface water
from
cooler
water
View source
What climate anomalies occurred in the 1970s?
Droughts
and
heavy rainfall
View source
What was the most catastrophic anomaly in the 1970s?
Collapse of the
Peruvian
anchovy
fishery
View source
What did the research in the 1970s identify about climate anomalies?
Many were linked through
ocean and atmosphere interactions
View source
What does ENSO stand for?
El Niño
Southern Oscillation
View source
What direction do trade winds blow?
From
east
to
west
View source
What are the normal conditions in the ocean-atmosphere interaction?
Trade winds
+ ocean circulation
Walker circulation
aloft
High and low pressure with associated precipitation
Warm pool in the west
Thermocline
Primary productivity
Southern oscillation
View source
What are the conditions during El Niño in the ocean-atmosphere interaction?
Weak/reversed
trade winds
Ocean current changes
Precipitation shifts
Warm pool moves eastward
Thermocline
becomes flat/stable
Upwelling
stops/reduces
View source
What are the conditions during La Niña in the ocean-atmosphere interaction?
Stronger
trade winds
High productivity
Cold water moves further west
Thermocline
reaches further west
Larger area of
upwelling
View source
What is the TAO array?
A network of moorings in the
Tropical Pacific
View source
What data does the TAO array send to shore?
Oceanographic
and
meteorological
data
View source
What is the Southern Oscillation Index (SOI) based on?
Sea level pressure differences between
Tahiti
and
Darwin
View source
What happens when pressure is higher in the east Pacific?
It is lower in the
west Pacific
View source
What are the signs of an El Niño event?
Warm water in the
East Pacific
Reduced
biological productivity in the East Pacific
Weak or reversed
trade winds
Lower pressure
in the East Pacific
Rain in the eastern section
Distant climate anomalies
View source
What are the typical conditions during an El Niño?
Warm water in the East Pacific
Weak trade winds
Increased rainfall in the eastern Pacific
Lower biological productivity
View source
See all 56 cards