Windy Community
    • Unread
    • Categories
    • Groups
    • Go to windy.com
    • Register
    • Login

    Does air pressure really affect weather?

    General Discussion
    6
    38
    5.1k
    Loading More Posts
    • Oldest to Newest
    • Newest to Oldest
    • Most Votes
    Reply
    • Reply as topic
    Log in to reply
    This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
    • CaefixC
      Caefix @Wheats | Premium
      last edited by

      @Wheats There´s also a vector of acceleration towards the equator balancing a centripetal vector of gravitation sucking back towards the polar vortex. Both are constants depending on latitude affecting the flow.

      Equatorial radius
      6378.137 km (3963.191 mi)
      Polar radius
      6356.752 km (3949.903 mi) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earth

      The centrifugal force even flattens the massive globe, how could oceans and atmosphere not be affected?
      It´s just thermo-dynamic embedded in the dynamics of the rotating system.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dynamics

      vujacicmV 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • vujacicmV
        vujacicm @Wheats | Premium
        last edited by

        @Wheats If I am right, then if temperature drops together with volume, then moisture will not increase. Is here then the answear, why all high pressure areas are dry, no matter of temperature?

        WheatsW 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • vujacicmV
          vujacicm @Caefix | Premium
          last edited by vujacicm

          @Caefix I found another thing, which is maybe very important. Different between adiabatic and isothermic. Adiabatic change pressure, isoterhmal change volume. Maybe here we can see more clear picture.

          1000004453.jpg

          CaefixC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • CaefixC
            Caefix @vujacicm | Premium
            last edited by

            @vujacicm
            🌦 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adiabatic_process
            😇 https://wissen.science-and-fun.de/tabellen-zur-chemie/dichtetabellen/dichte-trockener-luft/

            vujacicmV 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • vujacicmV
              vujacicm @Caefix | Premium
              last edited by vujacicm

              @Caefix Adiabatic process works in vertical way, but not in horizontal. There is isoterhmal process. The subtropics have the same pressure like polar poles, but different temperature. There process can only be isothermall. This is main difference.

              CaefixC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • CaefixC
                Caefix @vujacicm | Premium
                last edited by

                @vujacicm Sometimes vertical way is blocked...
                🏭🌫 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inversion_(meteorology)
                https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fog
                https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cumulonimbus_cloud ⛈

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                • vujacicmV
                  vujacicm @Wheats | Premium
                  last edited by

                  @Wheats I think that now understand better subtropics then before. I though that desert is made because skies are clear and they rich a lot of sun. Now I see that this is not reason. Hadley cell is actually heat engine. It brings hot air from tropics to subtropics. When air reach higher troposphere, temperature drops, not heat. So heat is actually transformed like radiators in house. That's the reason, why desets are hot. In case of oceans, heat is taken by water and there temperatures are not high like in desets.

                  The similar story is in polar cell. Polar cell is also heat engine. But when air reach the ground, all the heat is absorbed by ice.

                  In Ferrell cell is simillar, only difference is that heat is going to north by ground, not by high troposphere.

                  If I am not right, please fix me.

                  WheatsW 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • WheatsW
                    Wheats Meteorologist @vujacicm
                    last edited by Wheats

                    @vujacicm

                    Global circulation cells play a big roll in climate areas on Earth.
                    You're forgetting about moisture though - lack of moisture is the reason Deserts exist. Technically, Antarctica is a desert. But lack of moisture in subtropical desert areas can be caused by the Hadley cell that circulates warm moist air at the equator northward and southward.

                    As the warm moist air at the equator rises it expands, cools and condenses - forming clouds and eventually precipitation...This does a few things - causes low pressure, addition of water vapour to an airmass (from the ocean in this case) will actually make the air less dense, along with the increase in temperature, the air becomes more buoyant and rises - this air is destined to rise and rain itself out. As this air moves aloft (northward and southward) it eventually becomes cool enough and dry enough where it sinks towards the Earth's surface and that's essentially where you find your subtropical deserts on continents.

                    So the Hadley cell moves that warm (because of direct heating) equator air towards the poles.
                    The Polar cell moves that cold (because of lack of heating) polar air towards the equator.
                    and the Ferrel Cell is the in-between that helps get it all to where it wants to go.

                    But this is just an overall look at Global circulation cells - there is a crazy amount going on in the Earth's atmosphere, oceans, and land, and if you are interested in learning more about it I would suggest taking a class or doing some online courses.
                    These are two resources I used quite a lot before I actually went to school for this madness lol:
                    https://www.meted.ucar.edu/index.php
                    http://www.theweatherprediction.com/

                    Read up and then please, correct me if I'm wrong!

                    vujacicmV 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
                    • WheatsW
                      Wheats Meteorologist @vujacicm
                      last edited by

                      @vujacicm said in Does air pressure really affect weather?:

                      @Wheats If I am right, then if temperature drops together with volume, then moisture will not increase. Is here then the answear, why all high pressure areas are dry, no matter of temperature?

                      High pressure and Low pressure are all about the weight of the atmosphere - how much force is that air putting on the Earth.

                      Increasing temperature will make air relatively less dense. Increasing moisture will make air relatively less dense. This causes Low Pressure.
                      Decreasing temperature will make air relatively more dense. Lack of moisture makes air relatively more dense. This causes High Pressure.

                      High and Low pressure areas will have moisture, whether the weight of the atmosphere will allow the air to rise, cool, and condense is the question and there are too many variables to get into here. The main thing to consider is...in Low Pressure areas you will have air rising from the surface, in High Pressure areas you will have sinking air towards the surface.

                      You can have Low pressure areas that have hardly any moisture, maybe they are just lower pressure because the temperature increased throughout the day. You can have High pressure areas that have plenty of moisture, but because the weight of the higher pressure air, it will resist vertical motion of the air and have a hard time creating clouds and eventually precipitation.

                      Like Gkikas-LGPZ said, it's all relative to the surrounding air.

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                      • vujacicmV
                        vujacicm @Wheats | Premium
                        last edited by

                        @Wheats I will need to read more about those things.

                        Moisture is even more difficult to understand. When winds blow from North sea to Germany, there is rain. But when winds blow from Mediteranian sea to Egypt, there is no rain, even if Mediteranian sea is more warm then North sea.

                        WheatsW Gkikas LGPZG 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • WheatsW
                          Wheats Meteorologist @vujacicm
                          last edited by

                          @vujacicm It's all scalable spatially.
                          Global Scale, Synoptic Scale, Mesoscale, Microscale...

                          Global scale is like the global circulations - like Hadley cell, trade winds, that global transport of heat and moisture to the poles from the equator.
                          Synoptic Scale is like you see on a weather chart where areas of High Pressure and Low Pressure are identified. Large scale systems, like hurricanes.
                          Mesoscale is like thunderstorm complexes. Smaller scale things like Tornadoes.
                          Microscale is like local effects near the ground...like a sea breeze or valley flows type of thing.

                          and all of that interacts with each other lol

                          vujacicmV 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                          • Gkikas LGPZG
                            Gkikas LGPZ Moderator @vujacicm
                            last edited by Gkikas LGPZ

                            @vujacicm said in Does air pressure really affect weather?:

                            I will need to read more about those things.

                            I suggest you to sign up to MetEd (https://www.meted.ucar.edu/index.php)
                            where you'll find a lot of educational resources in meteorological topics.
                            You can use keywords (e.g. "NWP" for Numerical Weather Prediction)
                            and skill levels (e.g. "1" stands for easy) to narrow your search.
                            https://www.meted.ucar.edu/training_detail.php?topicSorting=15&languageSorting=1&module_sorting=skillLevelAsc

                            vujacicmV 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                            • vujacicmV
                              vujacicm @Gkikas LGPZ | Premium
                              last edited by

                              @Gkikas-LGPZ I found something interesting. On 250hPa I can see that cyclons are dry and anticyclones are humid.

                              Vlažnost.jpg

                              And for education I found this:

                              https://www.youtube.com/@introductiontoatmosphericd284

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                              • vujacicmV
                                vujacicm @Wheats | Premium
                                last edited by

                                @Wheats I found one important thing. Specific and relative humidity is not the same. Specific humidity is highest at equator and lowest at poles. But for relative humidity this in not the same. Highest is in poles and lowest in subtropical regions. Here is picture more clear. Polar regions are deserts even if humidity is high. Subtropical regions are deserts with high temperature. And even if there is specific humidity higher, relative humidity is lower. Picture is now little more clear.

                                Vlažnost.jpg Vlažnost2.jpg

                                WheatsW 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • WheatsW
                                  Wheats Meteorologist @vujacicm
                                  last edited by Wheats

                                  @vujacicm
                                  This is because:
                                  Specific Humidity represents how much water vapour is contained in the air.
                                  Relative Humidity is a percentage of the amount of water vapour contained in the air compared to the maximum that air can contain.

                                  In simpler terms..
                                  Relatively humidity is a percentage of how close that air is to saturation.
                                  Warm air can hold more water vapour than cold air can, before saturation occurs.

                                  So there can definitely be more water vapour in the air at the equator before the air is saturated - and the air at the poles is so cold that little amounts of water vapour will still bring it relatively close to saturation.

                                  Hopefully that makes sense.
                                  Anyone who reads this feel free to correct me or elaborate.

                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                                  • First post
                                    Last post
                                  Windyty, S.E. - all rights reserved. Powered by excellent NodeBB
                                  NodeBB & contributors, OSM & contributors, HERE maps
                                  Terms of Use     Privacy Policy