Meteorology 301
Thermodynamic
Diagrams:
Insert in ringed-three hole binder. Work not
turned in in binder will not be
accepted.
Point deductions for sloppy or late
work.
PROCEDURE
1. This lab involves use of the National Weather Service's Training Module on Skew T-Log diagrams provided by the instructur for the course.
2. Read pages
4-13 of the Training Module first.
Then complete the rest of the training module readings as appropriate.
Exercise 1.
Simple Plot of Sounding and Interpretation
There are two thermodynamic diagrams which are used
operationally: i. the Skew T/Log P (discussed in the
training module); and, ii. the Pseudoadiabatic Diagram. The instructor will give you copies of
both.
A. Plot
the following temperatures on both to get a visual representation of the
ENVIRONMENTAL
LAPSE RATE on a summer day in the Bay Area
when
fog was present.
|
Pressure
|
Temperature
|
Dew
Point
|
Wind
|
|
1016.4
|
16
|
12
|
270,13
|
|
1000
|
13
|
12
|
280,18
|
|
950
|
11
|
11
|
290,25
|
|
900
|
12
|
7
|
300,30
|
|
875
|
20
|
5
|
280,15
|
|
850
|
24
|
0
|
265,10
|
|
700
|
15
|
-5
|
265,10
|
|
500
|
10
|
-10
|
250,10
|
Now
plot the wind information (discussed in class).
You will learn in other classes that the typical
summer sounding along the California coast shows
a nearly adiabatic mixed layer near the ground,
surmounted by a "marine", subsidence inversion.
The air above the inversion is also very stable but
shows a slow temperature decrease with height.
The fog is found in the upper half of the marine (or
"mixed") layer and the lower half of the
inversion layer. Wind speeds tend to increase with height through the marine
layer and then
decrease rapidly above.
The inversion acts to "cap" whatever
convection occurs in the mixed layer, as discussed in class. It
is important to identify inversions or stable layers
on soundings, for this reason.
B. Examine
your two soundings. Describe which
"shows" inversions and stable layers
most dramatically and how.
C. You
will be given background on the importance of the dew point information in
class. Using this, your diagrams and the
material in the module, determine the
following:
Pressure Actual
Mixing Ratio Saturation
Mixing Ratio RH(%)
1016.4
1000.0
950.0
900.0
875.0
850.0
700.0
500.0
Now you can determine how "prone" the
atmosphere is for deep, mesoscale convection to occur.
D. Determine
the lifting condensation level, the level of free convection, the equilibrium
level from the Skew T/Log P.
E. Determine the CCL and CT from the Pseudoadiabatic Diagram. (Note: these determinations could have been made all onthe same chart or on both charts, the answers will be exactly the same.)