ATMO336 - Glossary
A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, I, J, K, L, M, N, O, P, Q, R, S, T, U, V, W, X, Y, Z
  
      
  
- Absolute humidity  
  
 - The mass of water vapor in a given volume of air. It
      represents the density of water vapor in the air.
      
  
 - Absolute zero  
  
 - A temperature reading of -273°C, -460°F, or
      OK. Theoretically, there is no molecular motion at this temperature.
      
  
 - Absolutely stable air  
  
 - An atmospheric condition that exists when a lifted parcel of air
      is colder than the air around it.
      
  
 - Absolutely unstable air 
  
 -  An atmospheric condition that exists when a lifted parcel of
      air is warmer than the air around it.
      
  
 - Accretion 
  
 - The growth of a precipitation particle by the collision of an
      ice crystal or snowflake with a supercooled liquid droplet that
      freezes upon impact.
      
  
 - Acid deposition  
  
 - The depositing of acidic particles (usually sulfuric acid and
      nitric acid) at the earth's surface. Acid deposition occurs in
      dry form (dry deposition) or wet form (wet deposition). Acid
      rain and acid precipitation often denote wet deposition. (See
      Acid rain.)
      
  
 - Acid fog  
  
 - See Acid rain.
      
  
 - Acid rain  
  
 - Cloud droplets or raindrops combining with gaseous pollutants,
      such as oxides of sulfur and nitrogen, to make falling rain (or
      snow) acidic - pH less than about 5.0.  If fog droplets combine
      with such pollutants it becomes acid fog.
      
  
 - Actual vapor pressure 
  
 - See Vapor pressure.
      
  
 - Adiabatic process  
  
 - A process that takes place without a transfer of
      heat between the system (such as an air parcel) and its
      surroundings. In an adiabatic process, compression always
      results in warming, and expansion results in cooling.
      
  
 - Advection  
  
 - The horizontal transfer of any atmospheric property by the wind.
      
  
 - Advection fog  
  
 - Occurs when warm, moist air moves over a cold surface and the
      air cools to below its dew point.
      
  
 - Aerosols  
  
 - Tiny suspended solid particles (dust, smoke, etc.)  or liquid
      droplets that enter the atmosphere from either natural or human
      (anthropogenic) sources, such as the burning of fossil fuels.
      
  
 - Aerovane  
  
 - A wind instrument that indicates or records both wind speed and
      wind direction.
      
  
 - Air density   
  
 - See Density.
      
  
 - Air mass  
  
 - A large body of air that has similar horizontal temperature and
      moisture characteristics.
      
  
 - Air mass (ordinary) thunderstorm  
  
 - A thunderstorm produced by local convection within an unstable
      air mass.
      
  
 - Air mass weather  
  
 - A persistent type of weather that may last for several days (up
      to a week or more). It occurs when an area comes under the
      influence of a particular air mass.
      
  
 - Air parcel  
  
 - See Parcel of air.
      
  
 - Air pollutants  
  
 - Solid, liquid, or gaseous airborne substances that occur in
      concentrations high enough to threaten the health of people and
      animals, to harm vegetation and structures, or to toxify a given
      environment.
      
  
 - Air pressure (atmospheric pressure)  
  
 - The pressure exerted by the weight of air above a given point,
      usually expressed in millibars (mb) or inches of mercury (Hg).
      
  
 - Albedo  
  
 - The percent of radiation returning from a surface compared to
      that which strikes it.
      
  
 - Aleutian low  
  
 - The subpolar low-pressure area that is centered near the
      Aleutian Islands on charts that show mean sea level pressure.
      
  
 - Altimeter  
  
 - An instrument that indicates the altitude of an object above a
      fixed level. Pressure altimeters use an aneroid barometer with a
      scale graduated in altitude instead of pressure.
      
  
 - Altocumulus  
  
 - A middle cloud, usually white or gray. Often occurs in layers or
      patches with wavy, rounded masses or rolls.
      
  
 - Altostratus  
  
 - A middle cloud composed of gray or bluish sheets or layers of
      uniform appearance. In the thinner regions, the sun or moon
      usually appears dimly visible.
      
  
 - Analogue method of forecasting   
  
 - A forecast made by comparison of past large-scale synoptic
      weather patterns that resemble a given (usually current)
      situation in its essential characteristics.
      
  
 - Analysis  
  
 - The drawing and interpretation of the patterns of various
      weather elements on a surface or upper-air chart.
      
  
 - Anemometer  
  
 - An instrument designed to measure wind speed.
      
  
 - Aneroid barometer  
  
 - An instrument designed to measure atmospheric pressure. It
      contains no liquid.
      
  
 - Annual range of temperature  
  
 - The difference between the warmest and coldest months at any
      given location.
      
  
 - Anticyclone  
  
 - An area of high pressure around which the wind blows clockwise
      in the Northern Hemisphere and counterclockwise in the Southern
      Hemisphere.
      
  
 - Anthropogenic
  
 - of, relating to, or resulting from the influence of human beings
   on nature 
  
      
  
- Apparent temperature  
  
 - What the air temperature "feels like" for various combinations
      of air temperature and relative humidity.
      
  
 - Arena cloud  
  
 - See Roll cloud.
      
  
 - Arid climate  
  
 - An extremely dry climate - drier than the semi-arid climate.
      Often referred to as a "true desert" climate.
      
  
 - Atmosphere  
  
 - The envelope of gases that surround a planet and are held to it
      by the planet's gravitational attraction. The earth's atmosphere
      is mainly nitrogen and oxygen.
      
  
 - Atmospheric greenhouse effect 
  
 - The warming of an atmosphere by its absorbing and emitting
      infrared radiation while allowing shortwave radiation to pass on
      through.  The gases mainly responsible for the earth's
      atmospheric greenhouse effect are water vapor and carbon
      dioxide. Also called the greenhouse
      effect.
      
  
 - Atmospheric models  
  
 - Simulation of the atmosphere's behavior by mathematical
      equations or by physical models.
      
  
 - Atmospheric stagnation  
  
 - A condition of light winds and poor vertical mixing that can
      lead to a high concentration of pollutants. Air stagnations are
      most often associated with fair weather, an inversion, and the
      sinking air of a high-pressure area.
      
  
 - Atmospheric window 
  
 -  The wavelength range between 8 and 11 micrometers in which
      little absorption of infrared radiation takes place.
      
  
 - Aurora  
  
 - Glowing light display in the nighttime sky caused by excited
      gases in the upper atmosphere giving off light. In the Northern
      Hemisphere it is called the aurora borealis (northern lights);
      in the Southern Hemisphere, the aurora australis (southern
      lights).
      
  
 - Autumnal equinox  
  
 - The equinox at which the sun approaches the Southern Hemisphere
      and passes directly over the equator. Occurs around September
      23.
      
  
 - Absolute Humidity 
  
  
 - Measurement of atmospheric humidity. Absolute humidity is the
      mass of water vapor in a given volume of air (this measurement
      is not influenced by the mass of the air). Normally expressed in
      grams of water vapor per cubic meter of atmosphere.
 
  
      
  
- Acid 
  
 - Substance having a pH less than 7. 
 
  
      
  
- Acid Deposition 
  
 - Atmospheric deposition of acids in solid or liquid form on the
      Earth's surface. Also see acid precipitation. 
  
  
      
  
- Acid Precipitation 
  
 - Atmospheric precipitation with a pH less than 5.6. Normal pH of
      precipitation is 5.6.
 
      
  
- Air Pollution 
  
  
 - Toxification of the atmosphere through the addition of one or
      more harmful substances in the air. Substance must be in
      concentrations high enough to be hazardous to humans, other
      animals, vegetation, or materials. 
      
      
  
 - Albedo
  
 - The reflective quality of a surface, expressed as the percentage
      of reflected  insolation to incoming insolation; a function of
      surface color, angle of incidence, and surface texture.
  
      
  
- Atmosphere
  
 - The thin veil of gases surrounding the Earth, which forms a
      protective boundary between outer space and the biosphere; 
      generally considered to extend about 480 km (300 mi) elevation
      from the Earth's surface.
 
      
      
  
- Ball lightning 
  
 - A rare form of lightning that may consist of a reddish, luminous
      ball of electricity or charged air.
      
  
 - Barograph 
  
 - A recording barometer.
      
  
 - Barometer 
  
 - An instrument that measures atmospheric pressure. The two most
      common barometers are the mercury barometer and the aneroid
      barometer.
      
  
 - Billow clouds 
  
 - Broad, nearly parallel lines of clouds oriented at right angles
      to the wind.
      
  
 - Black body 
  
 - A hypothetical object that absorbs all of the radiation that
      strikes it. It also emits radiation at a maximum rate for its
      given temperature.
      
  
 - Blizzard 
  
 - A severe weather condition characterized by low temperatures and
      strong winds (greater than 35 mi/hr) bearing a great amount of
      snow either falling or blowing. When these conditions continue
      after the falling snow has ended, it is termed a ground
      blizzard.
      
      
  
 - California current 
  
 - The ocean current that flows southward along the west coast of
      the United States from about Washington to Baja California.
      
  
 - Cap cloud 
  
 - See Pileus cloud.
 
  
  
 - Carbon dioxide (CO2) 
  
 - A colorless, odorless gas whose concentration is about 0.035
      percent (355 ppm) in a volume of air near sea level. It is a
      selective absorber of infrared radiation and, consequently, it
      is important in the earth's atmospheric greenhouse effect. Solid
      CO2 is called dry ice.
      
  
 - Carbon monoxide (CO) 
  
 - A colorless, odorless, toxic gas that forms during the
      incomplete combustion of carbon-containing fuels.
      
  
 - Celsius scale 
  
 - A temperature scale where zero is assigned to the temperature
      where water freezes and 100 to the temperature where water boils
      (at sea level).
      
  
 - Centripetal acceleration 
  
 - The inward-directed acceleration on a particle moving in a
      curved path.
      
  
 - Centripetal force 
  
 - The radial force required to keep an object moving in a circular
      path. It is directed toward the center of that curved path.
      
  
 - Chinook wall cloud 
  
 - A bank of clouds over the Rocky Mountains that signifies the
      approach of a chinook.
      
  
 - Chinook wind 
  
 - A warm, dry wind on the eastern side of the Rocky Mountains. In
      the Alps, this wind is called a foehn.
  
  
 - Chlorofluorocarbon (CFC)
  
 - a compound consisting of chlorine,fluorine, and carbon.
  
- CFCs are very stable in the troposphere. They are broken down by  
      strong ultraviolet light in the
      stratosphere and release chlorine atoms that then deplete the
      ozone layer. CFCs are commonly used as
      refrigerants, solvents, and foam blowing agents. The most common
      CFCs are CFC-11, CFC-12, CFC-113, CFC-114, and CFC-115. The
      ozone depletion potential (ODP) for each CFC is, respectively, 1,
      1, 0.8, 1, and 0.6. 
 
      
 
  
 - Chlorophyll
  
 - A light-sensitive pigment that resides within the chloroplast
      bodies of plants in leaf cells; the basis of
      photosynthesis.
 
 
  
- Cirrocumulus 
  
 - A high cloud that appears as a white patch of clouds without
      shadows. It consists of very small elements in the form of
      grains or ripples.
      
  
 - Cirrostratus 
  
 - High, thin, sheetlike clouds, composed of ice crystals. They
      frequently cover the entire sky and often produce a halo.
      
  
 - Cirrus 
  
 - A high cloud composed of ice crystals in the form of thin,
      white, featherlike clouds in patches, filaments, or narrow bands.
      
  
 - Clear air turbulence (CAT) 
  
 - Turbulence encountered by aircraft flying through cloudless
      skies. Thermals, wind shear, and jet streams can each be a
      factor in producing CAT.
      
  
 - Clear ice 
  
 - A layer of ice that appears transparent because of its
      homogeneous structure and small number and size of air pockets.
      
  
 - Climate 
  
 - The accumulation of daily and seasonal weather events over a
      long period of time.
      
  
 - Climatic controls 
  
 - The relatively permanent factors that govern the general nature
      of the climate of a region.
      
  
 - Climatic optimum 
  
 - A period in geological history (about 7000 to 5000 years ago)
      when temperatures were warmer than at present.
      
  
 - Climatological forecast 
  
 - A weather forecast, usually a month or more in the future, which
      is based upon the climate of a region rather than upon current
      weather conditions.
      
  
 - Cloudburst 
  
 - Any sudden and heavy rain shower.
      
  
 - Cloud seeding 
  
 - The introduction of artificial substances (usually silver iodide
      or dry ice) into a cloud for the purpose of either modifying its
      development or increasing its precipitation.
      
  
 - Coalescence  
  
 - The merging of cloud droplets into a single larger droplet.
      
  
 - Cold front 
  
 - A transition zone where a cold air mass advances and replaces a
      warm air mass.
      
  
 - Cold occlusion 
  
 - See Occluded front.
      
  
 - Cold wave 
  
 - A rapid fall in temperature within 24 hours that often requires
      increased protection for agriculture, industry, commerce, and
      human activities.
      
  
 - Computer enhancement 
  
 - A process where the temperatures of radiating surfaces are
      assigned different shades of gray (or different colors) on an
      infrared picture. This allows specific features to be more
      clearly delineated.
      
  
 - Condensation 
  
 - The process by which water vapor becomes a liquid.
      
  
 - Condensation level 
  
 - The level above the surface marking the base of a cumuliform
      cloud.
      
  
 - Condensation nuclei 
  
 - Tiny particles upon whose surfaces condensation of water vapor
      begins in the atmosphere.
      
  
 - Conditionally unstable air 
  
 - An atmospheric condition that exists when the environmental
      lapse rate is between the dry adiabatic rate and the moist
      adiabatic rate. Also called conditional instability.
      
  
 - Conduction 
  
 - The transfer of heat by molecular activity from one substance to
      another, or through a substance.  Transfer is always from warmer
      to colder regions.
      
  
 - Continental arctic air mass 
  
 - An air mass characterized by extremely low temperatures and very
      dry air.
      
  
 - Continental polar air mass 
  
 - An air mass characterized by low temperatures and dry air. Not
      as cold as arctic air masses.
      
  
 - Continental tropical air mass 
  
 - An air mass characterized by high temperatures and low humidity.
      
  
 - Contour line 
  
 - A line that connects points of equal elevation above a reference
      level, most often sea level.
      
  
 - Contrail (condensation trail) 
  
 - A cloudlike streamer frequently seen forming behind aircraft
      flying in clear, cold, humid air.
      
  
 - Controls of temperature
  
 -  The main factors that cause variations in temperature from one
      place to another.
      
  
 - Convection 
  
 - Motions in a fluid that result in the transport and mixing of
      the fluid's properties. In meteorology, convection usually
      refers to atmospheric motions that are predominantly vertical,
      such as rising air currents due to surface heating. The rising
      of heated surface air and the sinking of cooler air aloft is
      often called free convection. (Compare with forced convection.)
      
  
 - Convergence 
  
 - An atmospheric condition that exists when the winds cause a
      horizontal net inflow of air into a specified region.
      
  
 - Cooling degree-day 
  
 - A form of degree-day used in estimating the amount of energy
      necessary to reduce the effective temperature of warm air. A
      cooling degree-day is a day on which the average temperature is
      one degree above a desired base temperature.
      
  
 - Coriolis force 
  
 - An apparent force observed on any free moving object in a
      rotating system. On the earth this deflective force results from
      the earth's rotation and causes moving particles (including the
      wind) to deflect to the right in the Northern Hemisphere and to
      the left in the Southern Hemisphere.
      
  
 - Corona (optic) 
  
 - A series of colored rings concentrically surrounding the disk of
      the sun or moon. Smaller than the halo, the corona is caused by
      the diffraction of light around small water droplets of uniform
      size.
      
  
 - Country breeze 
  
 - A light breeze that blows into a city from the surrounding
      countryside. It is best observed on clear nights when the urban
      heat island is most pronounced.
      
  
 - Crepuscular rays 
  
 - Alternating light and dark bands of light that appear to fan out
      from the sun's position, usually at twilight.
      
  
 - Cumulonimbus 
  
 - An exceptionally dense and vertically developed cloud, often
      with a top in the shape of an anvil. The cloud is frequently
      accompanied by heavy showers, lightning, thunder, and sometimes
      hail.  It is also known as a thunderstorm cloud.
      
  
 - Cumulus 
  
 - A cloud in the form of individual, detached domes or towers that
      are usually dense and well defined. It has a flat base with a
      bulging upper part that often resembles cauliflower. Cumulus
      clouds of fair weather are called cumulus humilis. Those that
      exhibit much vertical growth are called cumulus congestus or
      towering cumulus.
      
  
 - Cumulus stage 
  
 - The initial stage in the development of an air mass thunderstorm
      in which rising, warm, humid air develops into a cumulus cloud.
      
  
 - Cyclogenesis 
  
 - The development or strengthening of middle latitude
      (extratropical) cyclones.
      
  
 - Cyclone 
  
 - An area of low pressure around which the winds blow
      counterclockwise in the Northern Hemisphere and clockwise in the
      Southern Hemisphere.
      
      
      
  
 - Doppler radar
  
 - Weather radar that measures direction and
      speed of a moving
      object, such as drops of precipitation, by determining whether 
      atmospheric motion is horizontally toward or away from the
      radar. Using the Doppler effect, it measures the velocity of
      particles. Named for J. Christian Doppler, an Austrian
      physicist, who in 1842 explained why the whistle of an
      approaching train had a higher pitch than the same whistle when
      the train was going away.
      
      
    
   - Electromagnetic radiation
  
 - All objects above the temperature of absolute zero (-273.15 
      degrees Celsius) radiate energy to their surrounding
      environment. This energy, or radiation, is emitted as
      electromagnetic waves that travel at the speed of light. Many 
      different types of radiation have been identified. Each of these 
      types is defined by its wavelength. The wavelength of 
      electromagnetic radiation can vary from being infinitely short 
      to infinitely long.
  
      
       
      
      
      
  
 - Fossil fuel
  
 - any of a class of materials of biological origin occurring within
      the Earth's crust that can be used as a source of energy.
  
- Fossil fuels include coal, natural gas, petroleum, shale oil, and
      bitumen. They all contain carbon and were formed as a result of
      geologic processes from the remains of organic matter produced by
      photosynthesis hundreds of millions of years ago.
      
      
  
  - Greenhouse effect
  
 - The greenhouse effect is the name applied to the process which
    causes the surface of the Earth to be warmer than it would have
    been in the absence of an atmosphere. 
  
      
  
- Greenhouse gas
  
 - Gases such as water vapor, carbon dioxide, and methane, which
      are relatively transparent to sunlight but absorb and emit
      longwave radiation.
 
      
      
  
- Heat Capacity
  
 - Is the ratio of the amount of heat energy absorbed by a
      substance compared to its corresponding temperature rise.
      
      
  
 - Infrared Radiation 
  
 - Electromagnetic radiation with a
      wavelength between 0.7 and 1000
      micrometers. Also called longwave
      radiation.
 
      
  
 - Insolation
  
 - Solar radiation that is intercepted by Earth.
 
      
  
- Ionosphere
  
 - A layer in the atmosphere above 80 km (50 mi), where gamma,
      X-ray, and some ultraviolet
      radiation is absorbed and converted
      into infrared, and where the solar winds  stimulates the
      auroras.
  
      
  
- Isotherm
  
 - An isoline connecting all points of equal temperature.
 
      
      
  
- Latent heat
  
 - Heat energy is stored in one of three states- ice, water, or
      water vapor.  The energy  is absorbed or released in each phase
      change from one state to another.  Heat energy is  absorbed as
      the latent heat of melting, vaporization, or evaporation.  Heat
      energy is  released as the latent heat of condensation and
      freezing.
  
      
  
- Latitude
  
 - The angular distance measured north or south of the equator from
      a point at the center of the Earth.  A line connecting
      all points of the same latitudinal angle is called a
      parallel.
  
  
- Lithosphere
  
 - Earth's crust and that portion of the uppermost mantle directly
below the crust, extending down to about 70 km (45 miles). Some use this term to refer to the entire Earth. 
 
      
  
- Longitude
  
 - The angular distance measured east or west of a prime meridian
      from a point at the center of the Earth.  A line connecting all
      points of the same longitude is called a meridian.
 
      
  
- Longwave Radiation 
  
 - See infrared radiation. 
      
      
  
 - Mesosphere
  
 - The upper region of the homosphere from 50 to 80 km (30 to 50
      mi) above the ground; designated by temperature criteria; has
      very low pressures.
  
      
  
- Meteorology
  
 - The scientific study of the atmosphere, including its physical
      characteristics and motions; related chemical, physical, and
      geological processes; the complex linkages of atmospheric
      systems; and weather forecasting.
  
      
  
- Methane
  
 - A radiatively active gas that participates in the greenhouse
      effect; derived from the organic processes of burning,
      digesting, and rotting in the presence of oxygen;
      CH4.
   
      
      
  
- Nitrogen dioxide
  
 - A noxious reddish-brown gas produced in combustion engines; can
      be damaging to human respiratory tracts and to plants;
      participates in photochemical reactions and acid
      deposition.
  
      
      
  
- Ozone
  
 - Ozone is a bluish gas that is harmful to breathe. Nearly 90% of the
      Earth's ozone is in the stratosphere and is referred to as
      the ozone layer.  Ozone absorbs a band of ultraviolet radiation
      called UVB that is particularly harmful to living organisms. The
      ozone layer prevents most UVB from reaching the ground.
 
    
      
  
- Ozone layer
  
 - the region of the stratosphere containing the bulk of
      atmospheric ozone 
  
- The ozone layer lies approximately 15-40 kilometers (10-25
      miles) above the Earth's surface, in the
      stratosphere. Depletion of this layer by ODS will lead
      to higher UVB levels, which in turn will cause increased skin  
      cancers and cataracts and potential damage to some marine
      organisms, plants, and plastics.
 
      
      
  
 - Peroxycetyl nitrate (PAN)
  
 - A pollutant formed from photochemical reactions involving nitric
      oxide (NO) and hydrocarbons (HC).  PAN produces no known human
      health effect, but it is particularly damaging to
      plants.
  
      
  
- Photochemical smog
  
 - Air pollution produced by the interaction of ultraviolet light,
      nitrogen dioxide, and hydrocarbons; produces ozone and PAN
      through a series of complex photochemical reactions.
      Automobiles are the major source of the contributive
      gases.
  
      
  - Photosynthesis
  
 - the process by which green plants and certain other organisms
      transform light energy into chemical energy.  During
      photosynthesis in green plants, light energy is captured and used 
      to convert water, carbon dioxide, and minerals into oxygen and 
      energy-rich organic compounds.
 
      
      
      
  
- Radar
  
 - Acronym for RAdio Detection And Ranging. An electronic instrument used to
      detect distant objects and measure their range by how they
      scatter or reflect radio energy. Precipitation and clouds are
      detected by measuring the strength of the electromagnetic signal
      reflected back.
      
  
 - Radiant energy (radiation)
  
 - Energy propagated in the form of electromagnetic waves. These
      waves do not need molecules to propagate them, and in a vacuum
      they travel at nearly 300,000 kilometers per second.
      
  
 - Radiational cooling 
  
 - The process by which the earth's surface and adjacent air cool
      by emitting infrared radiation.
      
  
 - Radiation fog 
  
 - Fog produced over land when radiational cooling reduces the air
      temperature to or below its dew point.  It is also known as
      ground fog and valley fog.
      
  
 - Radiation inversion 
  
 - An increase in temperature with height due to radiational
      cooling of the earth's surface. Also called a nocturnal inversion.
      
  
 - Radiative equilibrium temperature 
  
 - The temperature achieved when an object, behaving as a black
      body, is absorbing and emitting radiation at equal rates.
      
  
 - Radiometer 
  
 - An instrument designed to measure the intensity of
      radiation (usually infrared) emitted by an object.
      
  
 - Radiosonde 
  
 - A balloon-borne instrument that measures and transmits
      pressure, temperature, and humidity to a ground-based receiving
      station.
      
  
 - Rain 
  
 - Precipitation in the form of liquid water drops that have
      diameters greater than that of drizzle.
      
  
 - Rainbow 
  
 - An arc of concentric colored bands that spans a section of the
      sky when rain is present and the sun is positioned at the
      observer's back.
      
  
 - Rain gauge 
  
 - An instrument designed to measure the amount of rain that falls
      during a given time interval.
      
  
 - Rain shadow 
  
 - The region on the leeside of a mountain where the precipitation
      is noticeably less than on the windward side.
      
      
  
 - Rawinsonde observation 
  
 - A radiosonde observation that includes wind data.
      
  
  
 - Reflection 
  
 - The process whereby a surface turns back a portion of the
      radiation that strikes it.
      
  
 - Refraction 
  
 - The bending of light as it passes from one medium to another.
      
  
 - Relative humidity 
  
 - The ratio of the amount of water vapor actually in the air
      compared to the amount of water vapor the air can hold at that
      particular temperature and pressure. The ratio of the air's
      actual vapor pressure to its saturation vapor pressure.
      
      
  
 - Respiration
  
 - The process by which plants use their food to derive energy for
      their operations; essentially, the reverse of the photosynthetic 
      process; releases carbon dioxide, water, and heat into the
      environment.
 
      
  
- Return stroke 
  
 - The luminous lightning stroke that propagates upward from the
      earth to the base of a cloud.
      
  
 - Ridge 
  
 - An elongated area of high atmospheric pressure.
      
  
 - Rime ice 
  
 - A white, granular deposit of ice formed by the freezing of water
      drops when they come in contact with an object.
      
  
 - Riming
  
 - See Accretion.
      
  
 - Roll cloud
  
 - A dense, roll-shaped cloud attached to the lower front part of
      the main cloud. It often forms with thunderstorms along the
      leading edge of a gust front. Also called an arcus cloud.
      
  
 - Rotor cloud 
  
 - A turbulent cumuliform type of cloud that forms on the leeward
      side of large mountain ranges. The air in the cloud rotates
      about an axis parallel to the range.
      
  
 - Rotors
  
 - Turbulent eddies that form downwind of a mountain chain,
      creating hazardous flying conditions.
      
      
      
      
  
 - Saflir-Simpson scale
  
 - A scale relating a hurricane's central pressure and winds to the
      possible damage it is capable of inflicting.
      
  
 - Sheet lightning
  
 - A fairly bright lightning flash from distant thunderstorms that
      illuminates a portion of the cloud.
      
  
 - Shortwave radiation
  
 - A term most often used to describe the radiant energy emitted
      from the sun, in the visible and near ultraviolet wavelengths.
      
  
 - Shower
  
 - Intermittent precipitation from a cumuliform cloud, usually of
      short duration but often heavy.
      
  
 - Sleet
  
 - A type of precipitation consisting of transparent pellets of ice
      5 millimeters or less in diameter. Same as ice pellets.
      
  
 - Smog
  
 - Originally smog meant a mixture of smoke and fog.  Today, smog
      means air that has restricted visibility due to pollution, or
      pollution formed in the presence of sunlight - photochemical smog.
      
  
 - Snow
  
 - A solid form of precipitation composed of ice crystals in
      complex hexagonal form.
      
  
 - Snowflake 
  
 - An aggregate of ice crystals that falls from a cloud.
      
  
 - Snow flurries 
  
 - Light showers of snow that fall intermittently.
      
  
 - Snow grains 
  
 - Precipitation in the form of very small, opaque grains of
      ice. The solid equivalent of drizzle.
      
  
 - Snow pellets 
  
 - White, opaque, approximately round ice particles between 2 and 5
      millimeters in diameter that form in a cloud either from the
      sticking together of ice crystals or from the process of accretion.
      
  
 - Snow squall (shower) 
  
 - An intermittent heavy shower of snow that greatly reduces
      visibility.
      
  
 - Solar constant 
  
 - The rate at which solar energy is received on a surface at the
      outer edge of the atmosphere perpendicular to the sun's rays
      when the earth is at a mean distance from the sun. The value of
      the solar constant is about two calories per square centimeter
      per minute or about 1376 W/m2 in the SI system of measurement.
      
  
 - Sounding 
  
 - An upper-air observation, such as a radiosonde observation. A
      vertical profile of an atmospheric variable such as temperature
      or winds.
      
  
 - Source regions 
  
 - Regions where air masses originate and acquire their properties
      of temperature and moisture.
      
  
 - Southern oscillation 
  
 - The reversal of surface air pressure at opposite ends of the
      tropical Pacific Ocean that occur during major El Nino events.
      
  
 - Specific heat 
  
 - The ratio of the heat absorbed (or released) by the unit mass of
      the system to the corresponding temperature rise (or fall).
      
  
 - St. Elmo's fire 
  
 - A bright electric discharge that is projected from objects
      (usually pointed) when they are in a strong electric field, such
      as during a thunderstorm.
      
  
 - Santa Ana wind 
  
 - A warm, dry wind that blows into southern California from the
      east off the elevated desert plateau.  Its warmth is derived from
      compressional heating.
      
  
 - Saturation (of air) 
  
 - An atmospheric condition whereby the level of water vapor is the
      maximum possible at the existing temperature and pressure.
      
  
 - Saturation vapor pressure 
  
 - The maximum amount of water vapor necessary to keep moist air in
      equilibrium with a surface of pure water or ice. It represents
      the maximum amount of water vapor that the air can hold at any
      given temperature and pressure.
      
  
 - Savanna 
  
 - A tropical or subtropical region of grassland and
      drought-resistant vegetation. Typically found in tropical wet-
      and-dry climates.
      
  
 - Scales of motion 
  
 - The hierarchy of atmospheric circulations from tiny gusts to
      giant storms.
      
  
 - Scattering 
  
 - The process by which small particles in the atmosphere deflect
      radiation from its path into different directions.
      
  
 - Scintillation 
  
 - The apparent twinkling of a star due to its light passing
      through regions of differing air densities in the atmosphere.
      
  
 - Sea breeze 
  
 - A coastal local wind that at the surface blows from the ocean
      onto the land.
      
  
 - Sea level pressure 
  
 - The atmospheric pressure at mean sea level.
      
  
 - Secondary air pollutants 
  
 - Pollutants that form when a chemical reaction occurs between a
      primary air pollutant and some other component of air.
      
  
 - Selective absorbers 
  
 - Substances such as water vapor, carbon dioxide, clouds, and snow
      that absorb radiation only at particular wavelengths.
      
  
 - Semi-arid climate 
  
 - A dry climate where potential evaporation and transpiration
      exceed precipitation. Not as dry as the arid climate. Typical
      vegetation is short grass.
      
  
 - Sensible heat 
  
 - The heat we can feel and measure with a thermometer.
      
  
 - Sensible temperature 
  
 - The sensation of temperature that the human body feels in
      contrast to the actual temperature of the environment as
      measured with a thermometer.
      
  
 - Severe thunderstorms 
  
 - Intense thunderstorms capable of producing heavy showers, flash
      floods, hail, strong and gusty surface winds, and tornadoes.
      
  
 - Specific humidity 
  
 - The ratio of the mass of water vapor in a given parcel to the
      total mass of air in the parcel.
      
  
 - Squall line 
  
 - Any nonfrontal line or band of active thunderstorms.
      
  
 - Stable air 
  
 - See Absolutely stable air.
      
  
 - Standard atmosphere 
  
 - A hypothetical vertical distribution of atmospheric temperature,
      pressure, and density in which the air is assumed to obey the
      gas law and the hydrostatic equation. The lapse rate of
      temperature in the troposphere is taken as 6.5°C/1000 m or
      3.6°F/1000 ft.
      
  
 - Standard atmospheric pressure 
  
 - A pressure of 1013.26 millibars (mb), 29.92 inches of mercury
      (Hg), 760 millimeters (mm) of mercury, 14.7 pounds per square
      inch (lb/in.2), 101,326 pascals (Pa).
      
  
 - Stationary front 
  
 - A front that is nearly stationary with winds blowing almost
      parallel and from opposite directions on each side of the front.
      
  
 - Station pressure 
  
 - The actual air pressure computed at the observing station.
      
  
 - Steady-state forecast 
  
 - A weather prediction based on the past movement of surface
      weather systems. It assumes that the systems will move in the
      same direction and at approximately the same speed as they have
      been moving. Also called trend forecasting.
      
  
 - Steam fog 
  
 - See Evaporation (mixing) fog.
      
  
 - Steppe 
  
 - An area of grass-covered, treeless plains that has a semi-arid
      climate.
      
  
 - Stepped leader 
  
 - An initial discharge of electrons that proceeds intermittently
      toward the ground in a series of steps in a cloud-to-ground
      lightning stroke.
      
  
 - Storm surge 
  
 - An abnormal rise of the sea along a shore; primarily due to the
      winds of a storm, especially a hurricane.
      
  
 - Stratocumulus 
  
 - A low cloud, predominantly stratiform, with low, lumpy, rounded
      masses, often with blue sky between them.
      
  
 - Stratosphere 
  
 - The layer of the atmosphere above the troposphere and below the
      mesosphere (between 10 km and 60 km), generally characterized by
      an increase in temperature with height.
      
  
 - Stratospheric polar night jet 
  
 - A jet stream that forms near the top of the stratosphere over
      polar latitudes during the winter months.
      
  
 - Stratus 
  
 - A low, gray cloud layer with a rather uniform base whose
      precipitation is most commonly drizzle.
      
  
 - Streamline 
  
 - A line that shows the wind flow pattern.
      
  
 - Sublimation 
  
 - The process whereby ice changes directly into water vapor
      without melting.
      
  
 - Subpolar climate 
  
 - A climate observed in the Northern Hemisphere that borders the
      polar climate. It is characterized by severely cold winters and
      short, cool summers. Also known as taiga climate and boreal climate.
      
  
 - Subpolar low 
  
 - A belt of low pressure located between 60° and 70° latitude. In
      the Northern Hemisphere, this "belt" consists of the Aleutian
      low in the North Pacific and the Icelandic low in the North
      Atlantic. In the Southern Hemisphere, it exists around the
      periphery of the Antarctic continent.
      
  
 - Subsidence 
  
 - The slow sinking of air, usually associated with high-pressure
      areas.
      
  
 - Subsidence inversion 
  
 - A temperature inversion produced by compressional warming - the
      adiabatic warming of a layer of sinking air.
      
  
 - Subtropical high 
  
 - A semipermanent high in the subtropical high-pressure belt
      centered near 30° latitude. The Bermuda high is located over the
      Atlantic Ocean off the east coast of North America. The Pacific
      high is located off the west coast of North America.
      
  
 - Subtropical Jet stream 
  
 - The jet stream typically found between 20° and 30° latitude at
      altitudes between 12 and 14 km.
      
  
 - Suction vortices 
  
 - Small, rapidly rotating whirls perhaps 10 meters in diameter
      that are found within large tornadoes.
      
  
 - Sulfur dioxide (SO2) 
  
 - A colorless gas that forms primarily in the burning of
      sulfur-containing fossil fuels.
      
  
 - Summer solstice 
  
 - Approximately June 22 in the Northern Hemisphere when the sun is
      highest in the sky and directly overhead at latitude 23M"N, the
      Tropic of Cancer.
      
  
 - Sundog 
  
 - A colored luminous spot produced by refraction of light through
      ice crystals that appears on either side of the sun. Also called
      parhelia.
      
  
 - Sun pillar 
  
 - A vertical streak of light extending above (or below) the
      sun. It is produced by the reflection of sunlight off ice
      crystals.
      
  
 - Sunspots 
  
 - Relatively cooler areas on the sun's surface. They represent
      regions of an extremely high magnetic field.
      
  
 - Supercell storm 
  
 - An enormous severe thunderstorm whose updrafts and downdrafts
      are nearly in balance, allowing it to maintain itself for
      several hours. It can produce large hail and tornadoes.
      
  
 - Supercooled cloud droplets 
  
 - Liquid cloud droplets observed at temperatures below freezing.
      
  
 - Superior mirage 
  
 -  See Mirage.
      
  
 - Supersaturated air 
  
 - A condition that occurs in the atmosphere when the relative
      humidity is greater than 100 percent.
      
  
 - Surface inversion  
  
 - See Radiation inversion.
      
  
 - Synoptic scale 
  
 - The typical weather map scale that shows features such as high-
      and low-pressure areas and fronts over a distance spanning a
      continent.
      
  
 - Sensible heat
  
 - Heat that can be measured with a thermometer; a measure of the
      concentration of kinetic energy from molecular motion.
 
      
      
  
- Specific Heat
  
 - Is the heat capacity of a unit mass
      of a substance or heat needed to raise the temperature of 1 gram
      (g) of a substance 1 degree Celsius. 
 
      
  
- Stomata
  
 - Small openings on the undersides of leaves, through which water
      and gases pass.
 
      
  
- Stratosphere
  
 - That portion of the homosphere that ranges from 20 to 50 km
      (12.5 to 30 mi) above  
      the Earth's surface, with temperatures ranging from -70 degrees
      (F) at the tropopause to 32 degrees (F) at the stratopause.  The
      functional ozonosphere is within the
      stratosphere.
 
      
  
- Sulfur dioxide
  
 - A colorless gas detected by its pugent odor; produced by the
      combustion of fossil fuels that contain sulfur as an impurity; 
      can react in the atmosphere to form sulfuric acid, a component
      of acid deposition.
 
      
      
  
- Thermopause
  
 - A zone approximately 300 mi. in altitude that serves
      conceptually as the top of the atmosphere; an altitude used for
      the determination of the solar constant.
  
      
  
- Thermosphere
  
 - A region of the heterosphere extending from 50 to 300 mi. in
      altitude; contains the functional ionosphere layer.
 
      
  
- Total runoff
  
 - Surplus water that flows across a surface toward stream
      channels; formed by sheet flow, combined with precipitation and
      subsurface flows into those channels.
  
      
  
- Transpiration
  
 - The movement of water vapor out through the pores in leaves; the
      water is drawn by their roots from soil moisture
      storage.
  
      
  
- Troposphere
  
 - The home of the biosphere; the lowest layer of the homosphere,
      containing approximately 90 percent of the total mass of the
      atmosphere; extends up to the tropopause, defined by a
      temperature of -70 degrees (F); occurring at an altitude of
      11  mi. at the equator, 8 mi. in the middle latitudes, and at
      lower altitudes near the poles.
 
      
      
  
- Ultraviolet radiation
  
 - Electromagnetic radiation
      with a wavelength between 0.1 and 0.4
      micrometers.
 
      
      
  
- Wall cloud
  
 - An area of rotating clouds that extends beneath a severe
      thunderstorm and from which a funnel cloud may appear.
      
  
 - Warm-core low
  
 - A low-pressure area that is warmer at its center than at
      its periphery. Tropical cyclones exhibit this temperature pattern.
      
  
 - Warm front
  
 - A front that moves in such a way that warm air replaces
      cold air.
      
  
 - Warm occlusion
  
 - See Occluded front.
      
  
 - Warm sector
  
 - The region of warm air within a wave cyclone that lies
      between a retreating warm front and an advancing cold front.
      
  
 - Water equivalent
  
 - The depth of water that would result from the melting
      of a snow sample. Typically about 10 inches of snow will melt to
      1 inch of water, producing a water equivalent of 10 to 1.
      
  
 - Waterspout
  
 - A column of rotating wind over water that has characteristics of
      a dust devil and tornado.
      
  
 - Water vapor
  
 - Water in a vapor (gaseous) form. Also called moisture.
      
  
 - Wave cyclone
  
 - An extratropical cyclone that forms and moves along a
      front. The circulation of winds about the cy clone tends to
      produce a wavelike deformation on the front.
      
  
 - Wavelength
  
 -  The distance between successive crests, troughs, or
      identical parts of a wave.
      
  
 - Weather
  
 - The condition of the atmosphere at any particular time and
      place.
      
  
 - Weather elements
  
 - The elements of air temperature, air pressure, humidity, clouds,
      precipitation, visibility, and wind that determine the present
      state of the atmosphere, the weather.
      
  
 - Westerlies
  
 - The dominant westerly winds that blow in the middle
      latitudes on the poleward side of the subtropical high pressure
      areas.
      
  
 - Wet-bulb temperature
  
 - The lowest temperature that can be obtained by
      evaporating water into the air.
      
  
 - Whirlwinds
  
 - See Dust devils.
      
  
 - WHO
  
 - World Health Organization.
      
  
 - Wind
  
 - Air in motion relative to the earth's surface.
      
  
 - Wind-chill factor
  
 - The cooling effect of any combination of temperature and wind,
      expressed as the loss of body heat.  Also called wind-chill
      index.
      
  
 - Wind direction
  
 - The direction from which the wind is blowing.
      
  
 - Wind machines
  
 - Fans placed in orchards for the purpose of mixing cold
      surface air with warmer air above.
      
  
 - Wind profiler
  
 - A Doppler radar capable of measuring the turbulent
      eddies that move with the wind. Because of this, it is able to
      provide a vertical picture of wind speed and wind direction.
      
  
 - Wind rose
  
 - A diagram that shows the percent of time that the wind blows
      from different directions at a given location over a given time.
      
      
  
 - Wind shear
  
 - The rate of change of wind speed or wind direction over a
      given distance.
      
  
 - Wind vane
  
 - An instrument used to indicate wind direction.
      
  
 - Windward side
  
 - The side of an object facing into the wind.
      
  
 - Winter solstice
  
 - Approximately December 22 in the Northern Hemisphere when the
      sun is lowest in the sky and directly overhead at latitude 23
      deg S,the Tropic of Capricorn.
      
      
  
 - Zonal wind flow
  
 - A wind that has a predominate west-to-east component.
 
Andrea Hahmann
http://www.atmo.arizona.edu/hahmann/atmo336/glossary.html
Last modified: Thu Oct 17 09:50:44 MST 2002