The atmosphere and the Weather

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Clouds

A Cloud is a visible assemblage of small water droplets and/or ice crystals suspended in the air. A cloud might contain about 3,000 droplets per cubic inch of air. Cloud droplets range in size from microscopic to 0.002 inches. Although an individual cloud droplet is too small to see with the naked eye, the combined effects of many droplets make clouds visible. Clouds are actually composed of aerosols and are NOT water vapor, which is an invisible gas.

Clouds are extremely important in regulating the climate of Earth. As they form, vast quantities of heat are released into the atmosphere. In addition, clouds regulate the earth's energy balance by reflecting solar radiation back to space and by absorbing the earth's infrared energy. We will come back to these topics later in the semester. Presently we will discuss how clouds form.

All clouds result from net condensation (or deposition), that is, water vapor in the air condenses (or deposits) into liquid water droplets (or ice crystals). Interestingly, the formation of water droplets requires a surface be available for condesation to begin. In the atmosphere, water vapor condenses onto microscopic aerosol particles, such as dust, smoke, and salt, which are called cloud condensation nuclei. There are always enough cloud condensation nuclei around for clouds to form. The actual physical processes that take place during the intial stages of cloud formation are quite complicated and will not be covered in this course.

WORD document expanding on how water behaves and containg the numerical example given below

Steam is basically a cloud. Above a boiling pot of water, lots of water vapor molecules are released into the air by evaproation. As hot humid air moves away from the boiling pot of water, it cools sufficiently for net condensation to occur, and tiny droplets of liquid water form. This is visible as steam. As the steamy air spreads out, the concentration of water vapor decreases, the relative humidity of the air surrounding the tiny droplets falls below 100%, and the liquid droplets evaporate. Are you able to explain this situation in terms of the rates of evaporation and condensation? The same process explains why you are able to "see" your breath on cold days.

Clouds most often form as air rises and cools. As air cools, its relative humidity increases. Once the relative humidity reaches 100%, any further cooling results in net condensation and cloud formation. In fact, just enough water condenses to keep the relative humidity at 100%. A numerical example may help you to understand what happens. We will use the table of saturation mixing ratios, which was described in a previous reading page.

Putting This All Together

Most clouds form well above the ground surface. Air parcels near the Earth's surface contain water vapor, which evaporated from liquid surfaces, e.g., oceans, lakes. When these parcels move upward, they take this water in the form of water vapor with them. As parcels move upward, they expand and cool, i.e., the temperature in the air parcel decreases. This increases the relative humidity of the air in the parcel because as air temperature falls, the capacity for water vapor in the air decreases. If the air is cooled enough (down to its dew point temperature), the relative humidity becomes 100%. Once this point is reached, when air parcels rise higher, their temperature becomes so low that they cannot hold all of the water vapor that they started with. The excess water vapor (i.e., the water vapor in excess of the saturation mixing ratio at the lower temperature) condenses into liquid water, forming clouds.

As clouds form by condensation, latent heat is released. Under the right atmospheric conditions, this released heat can cause the air inside developing clouds to become warmer than the cloud-free air surrounding the clouds. Similar to a hot air balloon, warmer air surrounded by cooler air is buoyant because it is less dense (weighs less) than the surrounding cooler air, and thus this warmer air accelerates upward. This mechanism is the driving force for the formation of severe thunderstorms and hurricanes. We will expand on this concept later.

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