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Mr. DeNardo



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Earth Science Notes1

Certain terms we need to keep in mind in this course for the rest of the 
school year. These terms are listed below. A quiz on these terms will be 
given Friday. 
1) Observation - the perception of the environment by our senses. There are 
five senses - taste, sight, touch, smell, and hearing. We observe pollution 
in the environment, we observe when the environment is clean. We can 
determine a safe environment or a dangerous environment.
2) Instrument - a human made device that extends the senses beyond their 
natural limits. These are used in the lab setting through microscopes, 
telescopes, rulers, X-rays, calculators, etc. These are important to 
increase our understanding of the environment.
3) Inference - an interpretation of the environment without actually seeing 
it. We have never been to the center of the Earth, yet we infer it to be 
nickel and iron because we have observed 90% of all asteroids to be made of 
these.
4) Classification - grouping observations and inferences based upon similar 
characteristics. The seven kingdoms in biology are an example because they 
help us to relate a known observation to an unknown one.
5) Measurement - expressing an observation to a greater degree or with 
better accuracy. Comparing two objects as bigger or smaller than each other 
is an example. Expressing the length or weight of an object in numbers is 
another example.
6) Mass - amount of matter in an object. This is not the weight. Metal is 
more massive than air. A giant helium balloon will float while a penny will 
sink because the penny is more massive.
7) Volume - the amount of space occupied by an object. The bigger something 
is, the more volume it has. Think of cars, toys, and houses.
8) Percent deviation - expressing a mistake in numbers. Because we are 
human, we make mistakes. How big our mistake is is called a percent 
deviation. The formula is:
                Real answer - Your answer
             --------------------------------     x 100%
                          Real answer
If you calculate mass to be 64 grams and it really is 66 grams, the percent 
deviation is:
                   66 - 64
                  -------- x 100%
                      66
                     3.03%
9) Density - concentration of matter in an object occupying a certain amount 
of space. The more volume, the smaller its density, and vice versa. The 
formula is:
                               Mass/Density
If an object�s mass is 100 grams and its volume is 50 cubic centimeters, its 
density is 100 grams/ 50 cubic centimeters, or 2 grams/cubic centimeter.
10) Change - when the environment�s characteristics change over time. It 
could be cyclical and predictable (seasons, eclipses) or noncyclical and 
unpredictable (storms). Change could occur rather quickly (tornadoes) or 
over many years (global warming). The formula is:
                       Change in field value
                     -------------------------
                          Change in time
If it was 60 degrees this morning and now it is 70 degrees and if 5 hours 
passed, the rate of change is:
                         70 - 60 degrees
                            ---------
                             5 hours
or 2 degrees/hour.
11) Interface - the boundary between two different environments. Between the 
land and the ocean is an interface because we move from solid material to 
liquid water. The characteristics of both environments change.
12) Equilibrium - a state when the environment is balanced. Since Earth 
changes constantly over time, the equilibrium changes. This is called a 
dynamic equilibrium. More on this later.

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Natural resources are those materials and energy that we use from the 
environment. The air we breathe, the water we drink, the food we use. Fossil 
fuels, rocks, minerals are all considered natural resources.

 Even though resources are important to our lives, not every one in the 
world enjoys the existence of a given resource nor the same quantity of a 
given resource. For example, not every nation is an oil producer. This has 
led to Japan�s decision to practice imperialism at the start of World War 
II, and this has led to the belief that the US invaded Iraq for its oil 
because both Japan and the US are not blessed with oil needed to supply 
their people. Even nations that have precious metals do not have the same 
quantity of the metal. Gold is not found everywhere in the world, and it is 
not found in the same quantity in the nations that do have it. Diamonds are 
rare because so few nations can mine them.

 Resource is another term for natural resource. Therefore, anything from 
nature used by people is a resource.

 Renewable resources are those materials that are rather easy to replace 
when used. These include the air we breathe, the water we drink, the food 
supplied by nature, the wind currents, the energy from the sun, etc. On the 
other hand, nonrenewable resources are those materials not easily replaced 
by nature because they take millions of years to reproduce. These include 
any fossil fuel, soil, metals, minerals, gems, etc.

 The way we work to preserve our resources is called conservation. 
Replanting trees, crop rotation, developing alternative energy resources, 
limiting the use of resources, treating the environment with increased 
respect are all conservation methods that we need to practice.

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Pollution is a condition of the environment in which living organisms are 
affected negatively. High concentrations of pollutants destroys the 
environment over time. For example, smoke from factories, exhaust from 
automobiles, CFCs from hair sprays all erode the sidewalks and bricks over 
time.
 There are several causes of pollution. Most causes of pollution are the 
result of the Industrial Revolution. Some of these causes were mentioned in 
the above paragraph. Other causes are natural - volcanic eruptions, 
electromagnetic energy (radiation), nuclear waste, bacteria, sound, light.
 Despite the existence of pollution, there are measures that we can take as 
stewards of the environment to reduce or prevent the existence of pollution. 
One such method is crop rotation, varying the field in which we plant 
certain crops. Another measure is to use sun screen to block the sun�s 
harmful ultraviolet rays from reaching our skin. We can develop safer 
containers to dump nuclear waste. We can practice taking medicine and 
improving our medical knowledge. There are so many other preventive measures 
that we can practice. Can you think of any others?

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Every place on Earth is unique in its appearance and location. New York City 
does not have an identical location anywhere else. On a map we could see 
only NYC in its place, not Boston or Santa Fe. How de we know where NYC is? 
We use a locating system known as the latitude-longitude system. What does 
this mean?

 Latitude is a horizontal line running east to west. These lines are also 
called parallels because they never touch one another. These lines measure 
distance north and south from the Equator. The Equator is an important line 
of latitude at 0 degrees. This is the middle of Earth horizontally. Other 
important lines of latitude are the North Pole at 90 degrees North, the 
South Pole at 90 degrees South, the Tropic of Cancer at 23.5 degrees North, 
the Tropic of Capricorn at 23.5 degrees South, the Arctic Circle at 66.5 
degrees North, and the Antarctic Circle at 66.5 degrees South. When we 
discuss astronomy, we will discuss why these are important. Since all 
parallels never touch, we can say that there are 70 miles between each 
degree of latitude.

 Longitude is a vertical line running north to south. These lines are also 
called meridians. Unlike parallels, these lines touch each other at the 
poles. These lines measure distance east and west from the Prime Meridian. 
The Prime Meridian is an important line of longitude at 0 degrees. This is 
the middle of the Earth vertically. Another important line of longitude is 
the International Date Line at 180 degrees. This line sits directly behind 
the Prime Meridian. Since these lines touch each other, there is no set 
distance between any two meridians because they are closer together at the 
poles and further apart at the Equator.

 We locate places using these two sets of lines by writing the latitude line 
first and the longitude line second. For example, New York City is located 
at 41 degrees North, 74 degrees West. Note the following:

1) We have latitude first, not second. IT IS WRONG TO SAY NYC IS LOCATED AT 
74 DEGREES WEST, 41 DEGREES NORTH.
2) We must write the location after the number. 41 degrees, 74 degrees is 
wrong!!! Is it 41 degrees North, 74 degrees West? 41 degrees North, 74 
degrees East? 41 degrees South, 74 degrees West? 41 degrees South, 74 
degrees East? IT IS VERY IMPORTANT TO WRITE THE DIRECTION DOWN SO THAT WE 
KNOW WHERE TO LOOK ON A MAP!!!

 One last point: The Equator divides the Earth into two halves, called 
hemispheres. These two hemispheres are the Northern Hemisphere above the 
Equator and the Southern Hemisphere below the Equator. 
 The Prime Meridian divides the Earth into two hemispheres also. These are 
the Eastern Hemisphere to the right of the Prime Meridian and the Western 
Hemisphere to the left of the Prime Meridian.

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Topographic maps, or contour maps, are maps to represent the elevation 
(height) of various areas to give us an idea about an area�s physical 
appearance. These maps give a bird�s eye view of an area. For example, I 
have never been to the Grand Canyon, but I know what the terrain is like 
based on pictures of the Grand Canyon. Before the invention of cameras, 
though, people depended on topographic maps to gain a better perception 
about an area�s physical appearance. How? There are certain rules that are 
universal to creating topographic maps. No matter where a person is from, 
these rules are the same. It is the same as math. No matter where a person 
comes from 2 + 2 = 4. Therefore, what are these rules?

1) Topographic maps represent the elevation of an area. This elevation is 
represented by contour lines. These lines are usually closed. These lines 
are brown and only brown. If these are not brown, they are not contour 
lines. Every point on this line has the same elevation. Why? The answer is 
simple. In geometry, you learned that two points make up a line. These 
points must have certain things in common to make up the line. In this case, 
they have the same height. These lines never touch.
2) Any water on a map is blue. If there is a lake or a river or a sea, it 
MUST be blue. When rivers are drawn on a map, the water must flow downhill, 
or from higher elevation to lower elevation. How do we see this on a map? 
The contour lines bend when crossing a river. The lines bend upstream, or 
they POINT uphill. The river flows in the OPPOSITE DIRECTION that the lines 
point.
3) Any plant life or forest or wooded area is green and only green. They 
cannot be brown or gray. These colors represent other things. 
4) Every fifth contour line is a dark brown. Only these lines are labeled 
with an elevation. These lines are called index contours. Why do we use 
index contours? Many times a contour map has dozens of lines. This becomes 
too confusing if all lines are labeled. Therefore, we only label every fifth 
line.
5) If lines are close together, we say that the slope in the area is steep. 
This means that there is a sharp hill in the area that is difficult to climb.
6) If lines are further apart, we say that the slope is gentle. This means 
that the area climbs rather slowly, as in the Midwest.
7) All cliffs are represented by lines that touch each other. This is the 
only exception to lines not touching. Why do we do this? At a cliff there is 
a straight drop to the bottom. All elevations meet here.
8) Hilltops are represented by a series of smaller circles somewhere on the 
map.
9) Specific heights are represented by an �X�, called a spot elevation. 
These are used for places of interest, such as landmarks or historical 
sights.
10) To represent a drop in height, we use depression contour lines, which 
are brown. These lines have teeth inside of them called hash marks.
11) All contour lines have the same interval between them when labeling 
them. This interval is the contour interval. Every line on the map has the 
same difference between them in height. The most common intervals are 10, 
20, 50, 100 meters.
12) Depression contours represent drops in elevation.

 Now that we know how to illustrate a contour map, we can calculate the 
gradient (slope) of the area using the following formula:

                         Change in height
                       ---------------------
                        Change in distance

If we see that a location climbs 2 meters over the course of 15 kilometers, 
the gradient is:
             
                            2 � 0 meters
                          ---------------
                          15 � 0 kilometers
OR, 
                       0.13 meters/kilometer

If an area rises from 15 meters to 20 meters in 2 kilometers, the gradient 
is:

                          20 � 15 meters
                        ------------------
                           2 kilometers
OR,
                    5 meters/2 kilometers = 2.5 meters/kilometer
Which one is steep and which is gentle?
The first is gentle, and the second is steep.

 Once we know how to create contour maps, we can create a map profile 
following these rules:

1) Draw dotted lines from each line on the contour map to a space beneath. 
Be sure to include both sides of the same line, all lines, and keep all 
dotted lines even with the map above.
2) Using the vertical axis, label all heights of the contour map and put a 
dot on each dotted line at the height for the given line.
3) Connect all dots. (SEE NOTEBOOK FOR EXAMPLE)

 Map profiles give us a side view of a given location.

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                          Astronomy

Astronomy is the study of space and all celestial objects in it. A celestial 
object is anything that floats in space and includes stars, planets, 
meteors, comets, dust, and junk. One of the most important questions in 
astronomy is: When and how did the universe begin? The universe is space.

 Astronomers have proposed the Big Bang Theory to answer the question about 
the universe�s origins. The Big Bang Theory states that about 20 billion to 
30 billion years ago a cosmic cloud of extremely hot gas existed in a void. 
This cloud was about the size of the Milky Way Galaxy. It rotated around 
itself, creating gravity. This force of gravity began pulling the outer 
portions of the cloud in on itself. By pulling the outside in, the cloud 
began shrinking. This shrinking increased the temperature in the core of the 
cloud to critical levels. When the temperature could not be contained 
anymore, a giant explosion occurred which sent chunks of the cloud spiraling 
outward in all directions. The pieces from the outside of the cloud moved 
the slowest and are now the closest objects to Earth as a result while the 
pieces from the inside moved the fastest and are the objects in space that 
are furthest away. Every time astronomers detect radio waves that are 
another billion light years from us, the Big Bang Theory is updated because 
that is another billion years that the explosion occurred.  As time passed, 
the elements in the cloud cooled into larger elements until solids formed. 
More on this later.
 What evidence do we have about this? Astronomers have equipment in space 
and on the ground that detects radio waves emitted in space. Why is this 
important? Everything in space emits radio waves. The weaker these waves 
are, the further away an object is. This is proof that objects are moving 
away from us. Another piece of evidence that astronomers use is the 
collection of energy waves emitted by stars. If stars emit short wave 
radiation, they are nearby, but if they emit long wave radiation, they are 
far away. Yet, a third piece of evidence that astronomers use is the fact 
that 90% of all meteors are composed of iron &/or nickel. This is important 
because these elements are part of the genetic code of the universe. The 
only way for most of anything to have elements in common is if they have the 
same parents, or the same beginning.
 
 A second common question in astronomy is whether or not the universe is 
expanding or contracting. Astronomers are in disagreement over this 
question. Some say that the universe is expanding, and cite the long wave 
radiation that is detected on a daily basis as evidence. Yet, there are 
those that say the universe is contracting and cite the short wave radiation 
as evidence. These two schools of thought are the open universe (expanding) 
and the closed universe (contracting) schools of thought. No matter which 
school you accept, they both use the electromagnetic spectrum to support 
their position.

 The electromagnetic spectrum is the collection of all energy in the 
universe. It consists of three pieces. The first piece is the short wave 
radiation (gamma rays, x-rays, and ultraviolet waves). The second piece is 
visible light (red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet). This 
is a small piece of the spectrum, and it is the only piece we can see. The 
third piece is the long wave radiation (infrared waves, microwaves, and 
radio waves). 

 Members of the open universe school use the third piece as evidence for 
expansion while members of the closed universe school use the first piece as 
evidence for contraction. How do they collect this evidence? A special 
telescope called a spectroscope is used to gather the light of stars in the 
sky. The elements in the star emit certain colors that spread out on a sheet 
of paper that has all the visible light on it. The arrangement of color on 
the paper tells the astronomers what element is in the star as well as if 
the star is getting closer or further away. How? If the arrangement is 
toward red on the paper, the star is moving away and is evidence for a red 
shift. These stars emit long wave radiation. If the arrangement of color is 
near the blue end of the paper, it is evidence for a blue shift. These stars 
emit short wave radiation. If the arrangement is in the middle of the paper, 
there is no shift and is inconclusive. These shifts are referred to as a 
Doppler Effect.

 The arrangement of the electromagnetic spectrum is in the Earth Science 
Reference Tables on page 14.

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The universe is everything around us and everything beyond what we can see. 
Space is the universe like Cathedral is our school. Yet, the universe can be 
broken down into components like the school can be broken into components. 
We can divide the universe into clusters called galaxies like we can break 
the school down into clusters known as Seniors, Juniors, Sophomores, 
Freshmen. Each galaxy can be broken down into solar systems like each 
academic year can be broken down into different classes. Each solar system 
can be broken down into its individual parts � the planets � like each class 
can be broken down into its individual pieces � the students. Collectively, 
these form the universe. We can never study astronomy by studying the 
universe because it is too big to comprehend. Instead, we study the 
individual pieces. Let�s study these pieces.

 What is a galaxy? A galaxy is a collection of billions of stars, dust, gas, 
and solid material held together by the force of gravity created from the 
rotation of the galaxy. The Milky Way Galaxy � ours � contains several 
hundred billion stars alone. There are several hundred billion galaxies that 
we are aware of!!! Yet, each galaxy has its own unique characteristics. 
There are three different types of galaxies. The first is a spiral galaxy. 
Approximately 90% of all galaxies are spiral. These are round in nature with 
tiny arms reaching into space. The Earth is located on one of these arms. 
What is at the center of the Milky Way Galaxy? No one knows for sure, but 
many people believe it is a black hole. Look at a picture of it. Do you see 
stars there?
 The second type of galaxy is an elliptical galaxy. These galaxies make up 
about 8% of all known galaxies. These are shaped like a football primarily. 
Stars are clustered in the middle with some panning out.
 The third type of galaxy is an irregular galaxy. These galaxies comprise 
approximately 2% of all known galaxies. These do not have a definite shape. 
Hence, they are irregular.

 Every galaxy is composed of stars. Stars are large balls of gas held 
together by gravity that produces a very large amount of energy. How do 
galaxies and stars produce gravity? These celestial objects rotate around 
their own axis much like the Earth rotates on its axis. This rotation 
creates gravity that holds all the elements of a galaxy or star together. 
Stars rotate much faster than Earth does, producing much more energy than 
Earth ever will. The size of the star determines how much energy is produced 
and how bright it will shine. The amount of energy will also determine a 
star�s color. The different types of stars include super giants, giants, 
white dwarfs, black dwarfs, blue stars, red stars, yellow stars, and white 
stars. Look at the Earth Science Reference Tables (page 15) � Luminosity and 
Temperature of Stars Chart. Blue stars have a temperature of about 12,000 
degrees C or higher and are huge stars. These are the brightest stars in the 
night sky, yet they are billions of light years away. White stars are 
anywhere from 7,500 degrees C to 12,000 degrees C and are small. These are 
the second brightest stars in the sky. Blue super giants formed from large 
pockets of gas and produce a great deal of energy while white dwarfs formed 
from small pockets of gas and produce a great deal of energy. Yellow stars, 
like our Sun, are anywhere from 3,500 degrees C to 7,500 degrees C. These 
started as either blue or white and have cooled off over time. Red stars are 
the coolest (less than 3,500 degrees C) and are either super giants or 
dwarfs, depending upon several factors that we will discuss later. Practice 
reading this chart. Details on how to do so will be explained in class.

 Stars create energy using nuclear fusion. Scientists on Earth have 
discovered nuclear fission, splitting an atom. Nuclear fusion is combining 
two atoms. This requires intense heat, found only in stars. Think about 
welding two pieces of metal together with a blowtorch. This is the same 
thing. Stars usually begin with hydrogen. The intense heat fuses two 
hydrogen atoms to form a helium atom, which is bigger than hydrogen. As time 
elapses, the helium fuses with more helium to create a larger atom, and so 
on until all the energy is used up or until a solid is formed (usually iron 
or nickel). If this happens, the star burns out. This is what will happen to 
the Sun in about 5 billion years. Today, the Sun still has about half the 
hydrogen it started with. The amount of energy makes the star burn brighter 
or dimmer. Bright stars are young while dim stars are old. Therefore, blue 
or white stars are young while red stars are old. All stars move from blue 
to white to yellow to red. More on this later. The more energy in a star 
means the hotter the star, which also determines its color. More energy = 
brighter = hotter while less energy = dimmer = cooler.

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Just like a human being, a star goes through a series of stages referred to 
as its life cycle. The amount of energy in a star is dependent upon the 
stage that a given star is in, just as the amount of energy in a person 
depends on what age group we are speaking about. Children have more energy 
than teenagers who have more energy than adults who, in turn, have more 
energy than elders. The same is true with stars. The life cycle of a star is 
called the main sequence. 90% of all known stars are located in the main 
sequence. This sequence is located on page 15 of the Earth Science Reference 
Tables in the Temperature and Luminosity Chart.

 All stars begin life as a nebula, which is a cloud of dust, gas, and ash 
lingering in space. These nebulae have their origin in the Big Bang or from 
stars that have exploded over time. Gravity causes these particles to 
coalesce, or form a star by fusing together. As these particles fuse 
together, they create friction between them. When the mass of these clouds 
reaches the mass of Jupiter, their temperature starts rising, creating 
nuclear fusion. Once nuclear fusion results, the cloud is referred to as a 
star. This fusion is what makes the star shine. Now radiation can be emitted 
into space.

 The size of the nebula will determine the death of the star. Let�s begin 
looking at the evolution of a small nebula. Our sun was created from a small 
nebula about 5 billion years ago. Originally, our sun was a small blue star 
because of the intense heat created from nuclear fusion. As more and more 
hydrogen was fused into helium, the star expanded because of the high 
temperatures. However, since more helium means less energy, it began to cool 
off into a white star. This cooling process continues to this day, since the 
sun is classified as a yellow star. It will continue to cool off as time 
passes. Eventually, as bigger elements are created in the sun, it will 
expand into a red giant. Once this stage is reached, the energy will cease 
and it will collapse into itself, forming a white dwarf. The size of these 
dwarfs is smaller than Earth. The surface temperature is hot because of its 
size. White dwarfs do not shine as brightly in the sky because they are 
cooling off. Once a white dwarf stops radiating energy, it dies; hence, a 
black dwarf. 

 Stars with lots of mass � so called giants - are 10 to 100 times bigger 
than the sun. These stars also begin life as nebulae � very big ones � and 
are blue at first. As time continues, they cool off to white, then yellow, 
and finally red. They also expand as they age. However, because of their 
high mass, they explode in a nova. This nova does two things. First, it 
creates another nebula for a future star to form. Second, it releases all of 
its energy, leaving only very dense neutrons behind. Hence, a neutron star 
is formed. These pulse over time, until all of its energy is utilized. 
 
 Stars with extremely high masses � so called super giants � are 100 to 1000 
times the size of the sun. These form from massive nebulae and are blue at 
first. They also cool off to white, then yellow, and then red. These explode 
in a super nova event, leaving behind giant nebulae to form future stars. 
These may also implode, forming a black hole. The gravitational field of a 
black hole is so dense that no form of energy escapes.

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The star that is closest to Earth is called the sun. The Latin word for sun 
is sol. Therefore, the family of the sun � those celestial objects that 
orbit the sun � are referred to collectively as the solar system. Just as in 
each of your families every one is different, so too in this family is every 
one different. Some members are small, some are big, some are close by, some 
are far away, some are interesting, some are dull, some are hot to be 
around, and some are cold as ice.

 The sun is the parent of this family. In fact, the sun is so big in 
importance that it contains 99% of all the mass in the solar system. It is 
about 5 billion years old, medium sized, yellow, main sequence, and has 
thousands of satellites around it. These satellites are planets, asteroids, 
moons, comets, and meteoroids. 

 Planets are the largest objects in the solar system and are solid. They are 
spherical in shape. Based on radio waves detected from space, astronomers 
have identified hundreds of planets floating in space around other stars. 
More characteristics on planets tomorrow. 

 Asteroids are solid chunks of rock floating in the asteroid belt between 
Mars and Jupiter mainly. Astronomers are not sure what the story on 
asteroids is all about. The common theory is that they did not coalesce into 
a planet at the formation of the solar system. Either that or they exploded 
soon after formation. Most asteroids are 100 to 1000 kilometers in size. The 
largest is Ceres. Their shapes vary and are not always easily defined. Most 
are iron and/or nickel in composition, and they do not possess an 
atmosphere. 

 Moons, or natural satellites, are spherical solids that orbit around 
planets. Since they orbit around planets, they are smaller than the planets 
they orbit. We are aware of dozens of moons in our solar system, mostly on 
the outer realms of the solar system. The biggest one is Triton orbiting 
Saturn. The Earth Science Reference Tables lists the number of moons per 
planet.

 Comets are rocks floating from one end of the solar system to the other. 
Their orbits vary from 2.3 years to several thousand years. The most famous 
one is Halley�s Comet (76 year orbit). When they approach the sun, the ice 
around the rock melts, forming a tail. The nucleus of the comet is usually 
iron with frozen water and methane gas. They could be anywhere from 1 to 100 
kilometers in size.

 Meteoroids are chunks of rock floating in space. They are composed 
primarily of iron and/or nickel. When they enter our atmosphere, they are 
called meteors. Most meteors are so small that they burn up in the 
atmosphere before reaching the surface. Twice a year Earth passes through a 
meteor field. We can observe thousands of meteors burning up in the 
atmosphere, called shooting stars. These are meteor showers. However, if a 
meteor strikes the surface of Earth, it is called a meteorite. If a 
meteorite is big enough, it will create an impact crater.

 Where did all of this material come from? Astronomers suggest that about 5 
billion years ago a small impact event like the Big Bang occurred, sending 
remnants into space, coalescing into the planets, and other parts of the 
solar system formed as a result. As the planets were forming, impacts from 
rocks in space spun off material to form moons. As each celestial object 
cooled, heavier and heavier elements formed, which led to layers inside the 
objects. More on this later.

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Every planet has two motions � rotation (spinning in place around an 
imaginary axis) and revolution (spinning around the sun). Rotation 
determines the length of a day and is measured in hours while revolution 
determines the length of a year and is measured in days. Both motions depend 
upon a center of movement. Rotation has Earth�s axis while revolution has 
the sun.

 Every planet has an elliptical orbit, or an oval orbit. The orbit is never 
a perfect circle. (At least not here.) How much of an oval depends on the 
eccentricity of the orbit. Eccentricity is the flatness of the orbit. We 
know that our orbit is elliptical and has eccentricity because we are closer 
to the sun at some point in our orbit (winter) and further away at another 
point (summer). We need two measurements for eccentricity � the distance 
between the foci in the orbit and the length of the major axis of the orbit. 
A focus is the point around which the orbit bends. The sun is one focus. The 
other focus is imaginary. The distance between these two is important. The 
smaller the distance, the rounder the orbit. The further the distance, the 
flatter the orbit.
 Every orbit has two axes. One is the minor axis, which measures the orbit 
from top to bottom. The other is the major axis, which measures side to 
side. We need the major axis. We divide the distance between the foci by the 
major axis to get eccentricity.

           Ecc = distance between foci
               --------------------------
                 length of major axis


 For Earth the distance between the foci is 5 million kilometers and the 
major axis is 301 million kilometers (149 million kilometers from the sun at 
our closest plus 152 million kilometers away from the sun at our furthest). 
When we divide these two numbers, we get an eccentricity of .017
Notice that eccentricity is always a decimal!!!

 If the distance between the foci is 75 million kilometers and the major 
axis is 75 million kilometers, the eccentricity is 1 � a straight line. This 
would mean that the planet would enter the sun.

 If the distance between the foci is 0 because the sun is the center of the 
orbit, and the major axis is any number, eccentricity is 0 � a perfect 
circle, and no change in seasons.

 The shape of an orbit depends on two forces � gravity and inertia. The sun 
pulls everything into itself by its gravitational field, so all celestial 
objects move toward the sun. At the same time, all celestial objects were 
set in motion by the impact event that created the solar system so they try 
to move in a straight line. The interaction between moving in a straight 
line and moving towards the sun creates a circular path in space around the 
sun. SEE NOTES FOR ILLUSTRATIONS!!! This interaction is greatest closest to 
the sun and weakest further from the sun.

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Earth has two motions � rotation (spinning on its axis) and revolution 
(moving around the sun). These two motions are responsible for illusions 
witnessed in the sky on a daily basis. These illusions are called apparent 
motions. Planets, the sun, the stars, and the moon all have apparent motion. 
Apparent motion is the false appearance that a celestial object gives to us 
because of Earth really moving. Real motion is Earth�s rotation and 
revolution. These two motions are responsible for creating the apparent 
motions that we witness. What are these apparent motions?

 Since all planets are different distances from the sun, they all move 
around the sun at different rates. Mars and the outer planets revolve around 
the sun slower than Earth. This causes them to appear to move backwards in 
the sky from time to time. This backward movement is called retrograde 
motion. (SEE DIAGRAM IN NOTES). This retrograde motion is caused by Earth 
catching up to these two planets as they revolve around the sun.

 The sun gives us daylight. We all know when the day is beginning because we 
see the sun rise. We know when the day ends because we see the sun set. 
However, we already know that the sun does not revolve around anything. 
Therefore, the sun�s rise and set are apparent motions of the sun. The 
Earth�s rotation is responsible for these illusions of the sun. Another 
apparent motion of the sun is the climb and fall of the sun in the sky at 
different times of the year. These movements are illusions caused by Earth 
reaching different points in its orbit around the sun.

 Even stars have apparent motions. If we were to observe stars during the 
night, we would see that they move across the sky during the night from east 
to west. These movements are caused by Earth�s rotation during the night.

 The moon�s apparent motion is appearing to rise 50 minutes later each day 
and shifting slightly to the east every day. The real motion behind this 
appearance is that Earth rotates 15 degrees per day, but the moon revolves 
around us 11 degrees per day. This difference is responsible for the slight 
shift and change in the rise of the moon.

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There are two ways of viewing the solar system, each one quite different. 
The first way of viewing the solar system would be to use apparent motion as 
the basis of our view. In ancient times people had only apparent motion to 
use for their understanding. As was already implied in class, apparent 
motion uses Earth as the reference point for all motion in the solar system. 
Therefore, Earth is the center of this view. When Earth is the center, we 
say that apparent motion is the basis for a geocentric model. This model has 
Earth as the center of the solar system and everything revolves around 
Earth. All the planets, the sun, the moon, the stars, and comets all had 
orbits around Earth. The man who had developed this model was Ptolemy in the 
first century AD. He was a Greek in Egypt at that time. This view of the 
solar system was accepted until the 1500�s when telescopes were invented and 
better instruments were available for observation. Motion was confusing 
because nothing in space was observed to revolve around Earth, except the 
moon. Therefore, a new model was needed. 

 Nicolaus Copernicus who was the first to notice a significant flaw in the 
geocentric model of the solar system was an astronomer in the 1500�s. He 
proposed that the sun was the center of the solar system. This new model, 
which is accepted today as the correct view of the solar system, is called 
the heliocentric model. This model is based on the real motions that were 
discussed in class yesterday.

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Ptolemy is the man responsible for offering one of the first models of the 
solar system with his geocentric model. He felt that Earth was the center of 
the solar system, which he based on apparent motion. Fourteen hundred years 
later, Galileo invented the telescope and observed celestial objects 
revolving around the sun and not Earth. He was excommunicated by the 
Catholic Church for his writings on this observation. This, however, led to 
Copernicus developing the heliocentric model of the solar system, which he 
published after his death for fear of excommunication.

 Besides these three gentlemen, others were responsible for our current 
understanding of the solar system. Tycho Brahe observed positions of the 
stars and planets in the night sky over a twenty year period. From these 
observations, he helped to disprove the geocentric model. His observations 
were very important to another astronomer � Johannes Kepler.

 Kepler studied Tycho�s writings and developed three laws of motion (NO, NOT 
INERTIA). The first law of motion stated that all planets traveled in 
elliptical orbits. At times the planets get closer to the sun, called 
perihelion, and further from the sun, called aphelion. These were studied in 
our discussion of eccentricity.

 Kepler�s second law of motion stated that planets cover the same area in 
space at all times as they travel in their orbits. (SEE DIAGRAM IN 
NOTEBOOKS) This law is called the equal area law.

 Kepler�s third law of motion, called the harmonic law, states that the 
period of time it takes a planet to travel around the sun is related to its 
distance. Specifically, 

          Period*Period = Distance*Distance*Distance

 The last man responsible for our current understanding of the solar system 
is Newton. He developed the universal law of gravity. This law states that 
the gravity between two objects is strongest when they are closest to each 
other. It also states that the bigger an object�s mass is, the stronger 
gravity will be for it.

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Earth has two motions � rotation (spinning on its axis) and revolution 
(orbiting the sun). Each motion has evidence on Earth that we use to support 
its existence. Rotation has two evidences while revolution has one evidence.

 Rotation is supported by the Coriolis Effect. This effect applies to air 
and ocean currents on Earth as well as rocket launches and playing catch. 
This Effect states that Earth rotates beneath us but objects on the surface 
do not rotate at all. Air currents in the atmosphere do not touch the 
surface and ocean currents in the water do not touch the surface. Therefore, 
as Earth bends underneath these currents, they will travel in a straight 
line. The result observed here is that these currents will bend as they 
move. In the Northern Hemisphere, these will deflect to the right while in 
the Southern Hemisphere, they will deflect to the left.

 The second piece of evidence for rotation is the Foucault Pendulum, which 
was named after the French physicist Jean Foucault. He hung a metal pendulum 
about 60 feet above the ground in a room and set it in motion. All pendulums 
swing at equal rates in the same direction always. However, what Foucault 
observed is that the pendulum appeared to move in the room about 15 degrees 
per hour. Since he knew how a pendulum worked, he concluded that the Earth 
was actually moving.

 Revolution is best explained by our observation of constellations. Certain 
constellations (groups of stars in the sky that make a pattern) are visible 
in summer while others are visible in winter. The reason we can�t see summer 
constellations in winter and winter constellations in summer is because the 
sun is between us and them. Hence, we move around the sun.

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There are two concepts of time for every location on Earth. The first 
concept is local time, which is the time on our watches at any given point. 
The second concept of time is solar time, which is based on the position of 
the sun during the day. For example, local noon is 12:00 PM while solar noon 
is when the sun is directly above us (usually at 3:00 PM.

 Time is determined based upon rotation of Earth and longitude. Earth 
rotates 360 degrees in 24 hours. There are 360 degrees of longitude; 
therefore there are 15 degrees of longitude for every hour. Every 15 degrees 
of longitude, therefore, is one time zone. We begin all time zones at the 
Prime Meridian, which runs through, Greenwich, England.

 Starting from Greenwich, England, we can identify the time zone to the west 
by moving 15 degrees west, and we can identify the time zone to the east by 
moving 15 degrees to the east. When we move east, we add one hour for every 
time zone moved. For example, if we move 75 degrees east, we have moved 5 
hours, so we will add 5 hours to our local time to determine the time at 
that new location. If we move west, we subtract one hour for every time zone 
crossed. For example, if we move 75 degrees west, we have moved 5 hours, so 
we will subtract 5 hours to our local time to determine the time at that new 
location.

 The United States is so big that we cover several time zones. They are 
(from east to west):

1)	Eastern Time Zone
2)	Central Time Zone
3)	Mountain Time Zone
4)	Pacific Time Zone
5)	Alaskan Time Zone
6)	Hawaiian-Aleutian Time Zone

 Since Earth is round, it has no beginning or end. So, how do we determine 
where each new day starts? We arbitrarily decide the location of each new 
day. We use the International Date Line for this. If all meridians begin at 
the Prime Meridian, then each new day begins right behind it at 180 degrees. 
However, since nations extend beyond this point into other time zones (like 
Siberia), the International Date Line is not straight. Rather, it wraps 
around these countries in the Pacific so that the entire country has the 
same time � and the same date because, moving to the east would cause a loss 
of one day.

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There are eight phases, or appearances, of the moon. In order, they are:

1)	New Moon
2)	Waxing Crescent (First Crescent)
3)	Waxing Quarter (First Quarter)
4)	Waxing Gibbous (First Gibbous)
5)	Full Moon 
6)	Waning Gibbous (Second Gibbous)
7)	Waning Quarter (Second Quarter)
8)	Waning Crescent (Second Crescent)

 It takes the moon 27.3 days to make one revolution around Earth, but it 
takes 29.5 days between one new moon and the next new moon. Why? The moon 
has to sit just right between Earth and the Sun to be a new moon. The 
realignment takes 2 days. If two full moons occur in the same month, we call 
the second one a blue moon.

 The moon�s orbit is elliptical around Earth. When it is closer to Earth, we 
say that the moon is at perigee (�pretty close�). When the moon is further 
from Earth, we say it is at apogee (�away�). The same is true for Earth�s 
orbit around the Sun, except Earth is at perihelion (�pretty close� to the 
Sun) or at aphelion (�away� from the Sun).

 Because the moon�s rotation and revolution are the same, we never see the 
other side of the moon. The only reason we know what it looks like is 
because we have sent satellites there to photograph it.

 When the moon is in New Moon, it rests between Earth and the Sun. It looks 
like a giant black sphere in the sky. This is the phase the moon is in when 
a solar eclipse occurs. The dark part of the moon�s shadow (the �umbra�) is 
the area of a total solar eclipse while the lighter part of its shadow 
(the �penumbra�) views a partial solar eclipse. Other areas of the world do 
not see a solar eclipse because the moon is smaller than the Earth. Since 
the Sun and the moon are in a direct line, both of their gravities work 
together tugging on the oceans here. This tugging results in higher than 
normal high tides (called spring tides) and lower than normal low tides 
(called neap tides).
 As the moon revolves, it begins to reflect the Sun�s rays. This makes the 
moon appear white or yellow in the sky. We notice a banana shaped or 
fingernail shaped sphere in the sky. This is the Waxing Crescent. 
 When the moon revolves around the Earth, it eventually sits at a 90 degree 
to Earth. This is the Waxing Quarter. At this stage, the Earth experiences 
high tides and low tides. Half the moon that we see is lit up; yet, that 
half we see is only a quarter of the moon.
 As the moon continues to revolve, it begins to light up more and more. More 
than half the moon is finally lit up. This is the Waxing Gibbous.
 When the moon sits behind Earth, it is fully lit up. We call it a Full 
Moon. At this phase, there are again spring and neap tides for the same 
reason as above. It is in this phase that a lunar eclipse may occur. When 
Earth�s umbra covers the moon, it is a total lunar eclipse
while a partial lunar eclipse is when the moon sits in Earth�s penumbra. 
Eclipses are not too common because the moon�s orbit around Earth is at a 5 
degree angle to Earth, resulting in misalignment many times among the moon, 
Earth, and the Sun.
 As the moon leaves Full Moon, it begins to decrease in size (in terms of 
what was lit). We enter the Waning Gibbous in this phase.
 Eventually the moon and Earth sit at a 90 degree angle again. This is the 
Waning Quarter. Once again, there are high tides and low tides.
 When the moon is less than half lit up, it has entered the Waning Crescent.
 Finally, the moon returns to New Moon.
 
 Note: The shadowy side of the moon changes from left to right as the moon 
revolves around Earth. Waxing stages are on the left while waning stages are 
on the right.

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                           Energy/Insolation

Energy is the ability to do work. Most energy used by the Earth actually 
comes from the Sun while only a fraction of energy used by Earth is actually 
produced by Earth. As humans, we can see only a fraction of energy. All 
forms of energy are part of the electromagnetic spectrum. This spectrum 
consists of all energy forms � short-wave radiation, visible light, and long-
wave radiation. The fraction that we can see is the visible light � the 
colors of the rainbow. These components of the electromagnetic spectrum are 
electromagnetic energy � energy in the form of waves.
 
 By referring to our reference tables, we can see that short-wave radiation 
consists of gamma rays, x-rays, and ultraviolet rays. These all come from 
the Sun and are absorbed by Earth�s atmosphere. These have high frequencies 
because their wavelengths are small. Long-wave radiation consists of 
infrared waves, microwaves, and radio waves. These all come from the Sun as 
well as Earth. These bounce off Earth�s atmosphere because they have low 
frequencies. Their wavelengths are large because of this.

 The top of the energy wave is the crest. The bottom is the trough. The 
height of the wave is its amplitude. The distance from crest to crest is the 
wavelength. The number of wavelengths that pass by a given point in a second 
is the frequency.

 Once energy reaches an environment, it can interact with the environment in 
one of 5 ways:

1)	Refract, or bend. When we place an object in water (say, a straw), 
it looks crooked. This is refraction.
2)	Reflect, or bounce off. If the surface is smooth or light colored, 
energy will reflect off the surface.
3)	Scatter, or separate in various directions. If the ground is rough 
or rocky, energy will bounce around between the cracks for a period of time 
before leaving. This happens in deserts.
4)	Transmit, or pass through an object. Light passing through a window 
transmits. Light passing through a prism transmits.
5)	Absorb, or enters the object. If the ground is dark colored, energy 
will enter the object.

 How smooth or rough the surface appears is called texture. If the surface 
absorbs energy, it will give off energy. If a surface reflects energy, it 
will be shiny.

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Once heat (energy) is introduced into an environment, it transfers itself 
from one end of the environment to the other in one of three ways. These 
ways are conduction, convection, and radiation. Where heat originated from 
is called the source while the area where it settles is called the sink. The 
source has a high concentration of heat while the sink has a low 
concentration of heat. 

 Conduction is the transfer of heat energy from an area of higher 
temperature to an area of lower temperature by direct contact. For example, 
your mother always told you to never touch a pot while it was on the stove. 
Yet, you did. What happened? You burned your hand! Why? Your cold hand 
touched a very hot pot. The heat energy from the pot transferred to your 
hand by direct contact. It transferred by conduction from the pot to your 
hand. Why does this happen? There must be an equilibrium established between 
the environment of the pot and the environment of your hand. Equilibrium is 
a balance in temperature between the two objects. Since the equilibrium 
constantly changes, we say that the equilibrium is dynamic, or ever-changing.

 Convection is the transfer of energy between regions of higher temperatures 
to regions of lower temperatures in a circular pattern. This transfer is 
usually associated with liquids and gases. This transfer also results in 
circular motions called convection cells. Warm air rises and cold air sinks. 
Where is warm air found? Near the ceiling. Where is cold air found? Near the 
floor. This is why you are cold in the winter if you sit or lay on the 
floor. Yet, the warm and cold air are constantly in motion, rising and 
falling in a convection cell.

 Radiation is the transfer of energy by electromagnetic waves. Have you ever 
noticed that the streets pulse when it is hazy outside, or that the window 
is hazy when the radiator is running? This is because waves are produced in 
these instances. What you are seeing is the movement of the waves. 

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When energy enters an environment, it changes form as its speed slows. When 
a high frequency form of energy enters an environment and slows, its 
wavelength increases, causing it to change to another type of energy. For 
example, when a gamma ray enters Earth from the Sun, it slows down and its 
wavelength increases, becoming x-rays. The x-rays also slow down, becoming 
ultraviolet rays, which in turn will convert to visible light.

 There is always friction between energy and the environment it enters. The 
friction creates heat, which affects the speed of the energy wave. When 
things heat up, they move faster, so energy waves will increase at times 
(think about the advisories on very hot days when the haze outside is 
thick). Friction is also felt between wind and ocean waves, causing energy 
transformations there as well. 

 Every object in the world has pent up energy (potential energy) which is 
used when they move (kinetic energy). When a planet revolves, its potential 
energy is greatest near the sun because the sun moves it along, while its 
kinetic energy is greatest away from the sun because it needs to move on its 
own to reach the sun again. Potential energy is greatest in massive objects 
and objects highest above the surface. These two types of energy are 
constantly being converted from one to the other. 

 We can measure the force of friction in an environment using temperature 
(the measure of kinetic energy in an object). Temperature is the amount of 
movement an object�s molecules have. Temperature is not energy but a measure 
of the amount of energy present in an object. If molecules move quickly, the 
temperature is high. If molecules move slowly, the temperature is low. We 
can sense this temperature change when we feel hot or cold. We use a 
thermometer to measure the kinetic energy in a substance. These days, 
alcohol thermometers are used.  There are three types of temperature scales 
in existence. Two of them (Celsius and Fahrenheit) use the freezing and 
boiling points of water as their basis. Fahrenheit is the scale used in the 
United States. Fahrenheit is 1.2 degrees Celsius. Celsius is used throughout 
the world. You do not need to know the conversion formula because these 
scales are in your Earth Science Reference Tables. If we wanted to convert 
46 degrees Fahrenheit to Celsius, it would be 8 degrees Celsius. If we 
wanted to convert -15 degrees Celsius to Fahrenheit, it would be 4 degrees 
Fahrenheit.

 Kelvin temperatures are different. Kelvin uses absolute zero � the point 
where no kinetic energy is detected in an object. It was discovered that 
absolute zero equals � 273 degrees Celsius. Therefore, 0 degrees Celsius 
equals 273 Kelvin and 32 degrees Fahrenheit. Practice using the three scales.

 When two objects of different temperatures meet, there is energy transfer 
between them. The amount of energy transfer is measured in joules. A 
joule is the amount of heat needed to raise the temperature of one gram of 
liquid water one degree Celsius. The number of joules in each case is 
referred to as the specific heat of an object. The rule of thumb here is 
that solids require the least amount of energy to raise their temperature 
because their molecules touch one another. Gases require the most amount of 
energy to raise their temperature because their molecules are furthest 
apart. Liquids are in between. However, liquid water requires the most heat 
energy of all substances because of the unique way its molecules are 
arranged. This is why land heats up faster than oceans. The specific heat of 
major substances is in your Earth Science Reference Tables.

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Any changes in heat energy will cause the molecules to slow down or speed 
up. Let�s look at both cases individually. If an object heats up, its 
molecules spread apart. The spreading would cause molecules to move further 
away from each other. In the case of a solid, this means that the solid 
would melt into a liquid. In the case of a liquid, this means that the 
liquid would evaporate into a gas. However, if the object cools off, its 
molecules would contract into themselves. This contraction would cause the 
molecules to move closer together. In the case of a gas, this means that the 
gas will condense into a liquid. In the case of a liquid, this means that 
the liquid will solidify into a solid.

 For a substance to change phase, we need to add heat to it. We already know 
that a substance needs a certain number of calories to change phase. We also 
already know that at certain temperatures a particular phase is no longer 
possible, and the substance will change phase. For example, we know that at -
34 degrees Celsius water is frozen as ice. If we add 71.74 joules of heat to 
the ice, it will reach 0 degrees Celsius. At 0 degrees Celsius, though, ice 
is no longer possible. It begins to melt. Yet, we still are adding heat to 
it. Ice needs 334 joules to melt. If a thermometer were frozen in the ice 
cube, it would register 0 degrees Celsius instead of more despite the 334 
joules being added. The extra joules are used to change phase, not raise 
temperature. Therefore, this heat energy being absorbed is referred to as 
latent heat (hidden heat) because it is there internally for the molecules 
to spread, but not to raise the temperature. Once 334 joules are absorbed 
and the ice is melted, any extra heat added will register on the 
thermometer. To heat water, we need 4.18 joules for every degree raised. 
Therefore, if we add 418 joulees, the water will climb in temperature 100 
degrees Celsius. At 100 degrees Celsius, liquid water begins to change phase 
into gas. However, the temperature of the water stays at 100 degrees Celsius 
despite the extra heat added because the extra heat is latent heat again. 
Liquid water needs 2260 joules to evaporate into water vapor. Once we add 
the 2260 joules, the temperature of the water vapor will climb. The same is 
true if we reverse the order of the phase changes. The amount of latent heat 
needed for phase changes is in your Earth Science Reference Tables.

 A quick summary is needed here.

Specific heat � the amount of heat needed to climb 1 degree Celsius.
Latent heat � the amount of heat needed to change phase.

Specific heat � registers on a thermometer.
Latent heat � does not register on a thermometer.

 Both types of heat require energy to be absorbed from somewhere. We already 
know that Earth receives energy from the Sun and from its own core. The Sun 
produces energy by nuclear fusion while Earth produces energy from the 
pulsing of radioactive material in its core. The energy from both sources 
are used to heat up substances, which will very likely result in phase 
changes.

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1.	The study of the earth�s motions is a starting point for 
understanding the workings of the global ecosystem. The earth's two main 
motions are rotation and revolution. Rotation is the earth turning on its 
imaginary axis like a top. Revolution is the earth�s orbit around the sun. 
  
2.	The earth rotates west to east on its axis once a solar day. 
Rotation produces a set of physical consequences such as the daily rhythm of 
light and heat, the coriolis effect, tides, and the oblate ellipsoidal shape 
of the earth. 
  
3.	Rotation is a device for establishing reference points and lines on 
the globe such as the poles, equator, parallels of latitude and meridians of 
longitude. Places on the earth's surface are located using a network of 
lines called a geographic grid. Latitude is distance measured in degrees 0� -
 90� north and south of the equator. 
  
4.	Longitude is the distance measured in degrees 0� - 180� east or west 
of the prime meridian, an imaginary line from pole to pole passing through 
Greenwich, England. 
  
5.	Earth�s rotation causes differences in time and date. Local time is 
sun time as recorded on a sun dial. For convenience, we use standard time 
which divides the world into 24 time zones. Fifteen degrees of longitude 
equals one hour of clock time. Standard time in the United States is based 
upon the time for standard meridians such as Pacific Standard Time 120� W, 
Mountain Standard Time 105� W, Central Standard Time 90� W, and Eastern 
Standard Time 75� W. 
  
6.	A new day begins at the International Date Line (180�). When 
crossing this line westward, the calendar is moved forward to the nextday. 
When crossing the line eastward, the calendar is moved back to the previous 
day. 
  
7.	The earth revolves west to east in its orbit around the sun every 
365 1/4 days (astronomical year). The plane of this orbit is called the 
plane of the ecliptic. 
  
8.	The earth's seasons and different lengths of day and night are 
caused by revolution, inclination (the 23 1/2� tilt of the earth's axis from 
the perpendicular to the plane of the ecliptic) and parallelism of the 
earth�s axial tilt. 
  
9.	The angle at which the sun strikes the earth�s surface varies with 
latitude and season. At the equator, the sun is directly overhead at noon 
(subsolar point) twice a year during the equinoxes; March 21 (Vernal 
Equinox), and September 23 (Autumnal Equinox). During the equinoxes,the 
circle of illumination (a line dividing the lighted portion of the globe 
from the dark side) passes through the poles to give equal lengths of day 
and night worldwide. 
  
10.	The northernmost and southernmost points to receive the sun�s direct 
rays at noon are called the tropics. The sun is directly overhead at noon at 
the Tropic of Cancer (23 1/2� North) on June 21, the summer solstice. The 
sun is directly overhead at noon at the Tropic of Capricorn (23 1/2� South) 
on December 22, the winter solstice. 
  
11.	As the earth changes its position relative to the sun, the length of 
daylight also changes. The biggest differences in daylight occur during the 
summer and winter solstices when locations within the Arctic and Antarctic 
circles receive either 24 hour days or 24 hour nights. 

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InSolAtion is incoming solar radiation. This refers to energy from the sun. 
All energy that enters Earth is either absorbed or reflected by our 
atmosphere. Most of the energy that enters Earth is visible light. This is 
because visible light has a high frequency and short wavelength. The harmful 
radiation (short wave radiation) generally slows upon entering our 
atmosphere and changes into visible light.

 Earth�s atmosphere absorbs ultraviolet light and infrared radiation. Both 
of these types of energy is absorbed by the ozone layer in the upper 
atmosphere. Water vapor, carbon dioxide, and methane absorb infrared waves. 
The absorption increases the energy on Earth, raising the temperature. 
However, the icy surfaces on Earth and the bodies of water reflect other 
forms of energy that lower the temperature on Earth. This interaction 
between absorption and reflection keeps temperatures balanced on Earth. 

 InSolAtion is affected by several factors. The first of these is the angle 
of incidence. This is the angle at which the sunlight hits the Earth�s 
surface. The closer the angle is to 90 degrees, the stronger the heat energy 
is. This is why the Equator is hotter than the Poles. Sunlight strikes there 
at 90 degrees while it strikes the Poles at almost 0 degrees. 
 The second factor is the texture of the surface. Smooth surfaces (ice and 
water) reflect sunlight, lowering temperatures. Rough surfaces or rocky 
surfaces absorb heat, raising temperatures. This is why deserts are hotter 
than oceans and icy areas. When matter changes phase, heat is needed for 
such phase changes. Therefore, the heat absorbed is not used to raise the 
temperature, but to change phase. When ice caps are melting, the temperature 
is still cool, although a lot of heat is absorbed while changing phase.
 Whether you live near the coast or inland is important in understanding 
temperature changes. Since water has a higher specific heat than land, its 
temperature climbs slower than land. This is why coastlines are cooler in 
summer than inland and warmer in winter than inland.

 When we increase pollution, we increase the amount of carbon dioxide in the 
air, leading to higher temperatures because heat can not pass through the 
CO2 in the air to escape the atmosphere. This is what causes global warming. 
However, a decrease in carbon dioxide levels or massive volcanic eruptions 
are enough to block sunlight from entering Earth, causing Ice Ages.

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The amount of InSolAtion received by Earth is not constant. It always 
changes. Think about when the highest or lowest temperatures are reached 
during the day. This is proof of this. Earth�s shape, your latitude, 
seasons, and the time of day are all factors determining how strong or weak 
InSolAtion is.

 Earth is round. The Equator bulges. Therefore, not all points will receive 
sunlight at the same time or in the same amount. The closer you are to the 
Equator, the stronger the energy is received because sunlight strikes at a 
90 degree angle. The further you are from the Equator, the smaller the angle 
is, resulting in less energy received.
 Latitude is related to this directly. The lower the latitude, the hotter 
the temperature, and vice versa. Enough said.
 Seasons are a factor for the amount of InSolAtion because temperatures in 
the summer are higher than in winter. This is because we face the Sun at a 
more direct angle than in winter. This more direct angle results in more 
energy absorbed by Earth. 
 The time of day affects InSolAtion because at different times, the Sun sits 
at different angle sin the sky. When the Sun is at its highest point, we 
receive the most energy. We receive the least energy when it is at its 
lowest point.

 We receive the most energy in summer and the least in winter. Just think 
about the temperatures in those seasons. On the first day of spring/autumn 
(spring equinox/vernal equinox) we receive exactly 12 hours of daylight and 
night. Between spring and autumn, the days have more sunlight. This means 
more energy and higher temperatures. Between autumn and spring the opposite 
is true. Between the Arctic Circle and North Pole and between the Antarctic 
Circle and South Pole, there are 24 hours daylight between spring and autumn 
and 24 hours of night between autumn and spring because of the tilt of the 
axis.

 The hottest time of day is approximately 3:00 PM and the coldest is before 
sunrise because it takes time to heat up and cool off. The hottest time of 
year is July and the coldest time is January for the same reason.

 What causes the seasons? Changes in the amount of moisture and temperature 
causes seasons. How? When we revolve, we change position around the Sun. 
These changes result in differences in the energy received here. Thus, a 
seasonal change. The tilt of Earth�s axis also causes seasons because of an 
imbalance in InSolAtion. Any changes here would cause extreme seasonal 
shifts. When our orbit moves toward the Sun, temperatures rise, and if we 
move away, temperatures fall.

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Earth has a heat budget that works the same way your parents� budget works. 
The amount of heat received by the Sun should equal the amount of energy 
emitted by Earth. If we receive more energy than we emit, we heat up. If we 
receive less energy than we emit, we cool off. Energy is either reflected 
into space or absorbed by Earth. The energy that is absorbed is circulated 
through the atmosphere by conduction, convection, and radiation. 

 What happens when we receive too much energy? Global warming occurs, and 
the polar ice caps melt. We go through natural periods of global warming, 
when we move closer to the sun as our orbit shifts. However, our rate of 
pollution these days is causing global warming too. Therefore, is this 
global warming naturally occurring or artificial?

 What happens when we receive less energy? We cool off, like in an Ice Age. 
This occurs when our orbit shifts away from the sun, or massive volcanic 
eruptions cause this. There have been at least seven Ice Ages in our history.

 Sometimes wind patterns change when the heat budget shifts slightly. This 
causes ocean currents to shift somewhat, resulting in hot summers and mild 
winters. This is El Nino. It takes about seven years for El Nino to occur.

 The heat budget shifts when the number of sunspots changes. When the sun 
has more sunspots, it emits more energy and vice versa. The position in 
orbit also affects the heat budget because of the change in seasons. If the 
axis were to tilt more, temperatures would be cooler and if it were to tilt 
less, temperatures would increase. Volcanic eruptions are another cause. See 
above. Human actions (deforestation, desertification, pollution, 
urbanization) all cause shifts in the heat budget as well.

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                            METEOROLOGY

Meteorology is all about weather variables, or those factors that change on 
an hourly basis. These variables are: temperature, air pressure, wind, 
moisture conditions, cloud cover, precipitation, and storms. All weather 
(which is the study that meteorology focuses on) occurs in the bottom layer 
of the atmosphere. That layer is called the troposphere. The troposphere 
climbs up to about 8 miles above sea level (12 kilometers). All water vapor 
exists in the troposphere only. As we climb through the troposphere, 
pressure decreases as does temperature. That�s why it is so common for 
planes to ice up during flight. All the heavier gases (oxygen, carbon 
dioxide, carbon, nitrogen, hydrogen, etc.) exists here.
 At an elevation of 8 miles (12 kilometers), there is a break in the 
atmosphere called the tropopause. This is an interface between the 
troposphere and the next layer � the stratosphere. Above this pause, 
temperatures switch direction. This is called a temperature inversion. The 
stratosphere climbs from 8 miles to 31 miles above sea level (12 � 50 
kilometers). Pressure continues to drop, but temperature climbs as you 
climb. No water vapor exists here. Therefore, no weather occurs here.
 At 31 miles (50 kilometers), there is another interface called the 
stratopause. Above this pause there is another temperature inversion. The 
mesosphere exists from 31 to 50 miles above sea level (50 � 81 kilometers). 
No water vapor exists here. Pressure continues to drop, and temperatures 
drop as you climb.
 At 50 miles (81 kilometers) there is yet another interface called the 
mesopause, above which there is another temperature inversion. The 
thermosphere exists here. There is no water vapor here. Pressure drops 
rapidly, and temperatures soar here. This is the outer layer of the 
atmosphere which receives a majority of the sun�s insolation. 

 We illustrate temperature on a weather map by connecting areas of equal 
temperatures with isolines. The rules for drawing isolines are the same as 
contour lines. See the notes on contour lines for more information.

 How does the atmosphere heat up and cool off? Energy enters Earth. The 
energy circulates through the atmosphere through convection. Warm air rises 
and cool air sinks. The amount of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere also 
determines the heating and cooling of the atmosphere. Conduction occurs when 
warm air hits the surface and transfers directly into the immediate air 
around the surface. Certain forms of electromagnetic energy is absorbed by 
the atmosphere. Phase changes are also responsible for the changing of 
temperatures in the atmosphere as is the Coriolis Effect moving the currents 
around the Earth. The movement produces friction, which is measured as heat. 
The changing temperatures of the air will affect density of the air, which 
creates convection currents.

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Air pressure (also called barometric pressure or atmospheric pressure) 
refers to the weight of air pushing down on a surface. It will continuously 
change with changes in the environment. More dense air yields more weight, 
resulting in more pressure. We measure air pressure using a barometer. 
Mercury barometers are the most commonly used barometer. Standard air 
pressure is 14.7 lbs/square inch, 29.92 inches of mercury, or 1013.2 
millibars at sea level. This is called one atmosphere. We can convert from 
inches of mercury to millibars using the Earth Science Reference Tables. To 
use this table, just slide your finger across from inches to millibars and 
vice versa (like we did with the temperature scales). We illustrate air 
pressure on a map using isobars (lines that connect areas of equal air 
pressure). The rules for drawing isobars are the same as for isolines and 
contour lines.

 What causes air pressure to change? Anything that will shift density will 
change air pressure. Therefore, it is not surprising that when the 
temperature shifts, air pressure will fluctuate. How? When air heats up, the 
molecules expand, taking up more space. This increase in volume reduces 
density. The lower density causes the air to rise. When temperature drops, 
the molecules contract, taking up less space. This contraction increases 
density, causing the air to drop.
 When water evaporates into the air, its weight reduces the weight of the 
air. Why? Water vapor weighs less than oxygen and nitrogen � the two most 
abundant gases in the air. When more and more water vapor is present, the 
air�s weight decreases. This decrease results in density dropping, making 
the air rise. When the air loses water vapor, the air�s weight increases. 
This increase leads to the weight of air increasing, causing the air�s 
density to rise. Thus, the air sinks.
 As we climb higher and higher up, the less air is present � especially 
oxygen � which results in less weight above you. The reduced weight 
translates into less density. Less density translates into less pressure. 
The further down you descend, the more weight is above you, which translates 
into higher density. Higher density translates into higher pressure.

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Wind is the horizontal movement of air parallel to Earth�s surface. We 
measure wind using two types of instruments. The first is called a wind 
vane. You have all seen these before. They sit on top of buildings or in 
front of houses. They are shaped like arrows and spin when the wind is 
blowing. The direction the front of the arrow points is the direction the 
wind came from.
 The second instrument is an anemometer. This is a series of semi-circular 
cups that spin when the wind blows. The direction that the semi-circle faces 
is the direction that the wind came from. 

 All wind blows from areas of colder temperatures to areas of higher 
temperatures. This is why we feel cold when the wind blows. Put in another 
way, wind blows from areas of higher pressure to areas of lower pressure. 
The difference in pressure between two areas is called the air pressure 
gradient, whose formula is found in the Earth Science Reference Tables. The 
steeper the gradient, the stronger the wind. The gentler the gradient, the 
weaker the wind. 

 Wind is measured in knots. A knot equals 1.15 miles per hour. The faster 
the wind blows, the higher the speed will be. More on this later.

 Two types of wind shifts are common. The first is a land breeze. The second 
is a sea breeze. A land breeze is when wind blows from the land to the sea. 
This occurs when high pressure sits over land and low pressure sits over 
water. When does this happen? It happens when cooler air is over land and 
warmer air is over water. For those of you who have been to the beach or 
live near water, you know that this occurs at night.
 If a land breeze occurs at night, then a sea breeze occurs during the day. 
This is because water will heat up slower than land due to its higher 
specific heat. This allows the land to climb in temperature faster than the 
water, producing a lower pressure over land and a higher pressure over 
water. This allows the wind to blow from the water to the land.

 If we name these two wind shifts for where the wind came from and if wind 
vanes/anemometers point to where the wind came from, it stands to reason 
that winds are named for where they came from. The common wind types are 
northeast winds, southwest winds, northwest winds, and southeast winds. 
These winds are not named north, east, south, and west because the Coriolis 
Effect bends them as they move. These winds are responsible for driving 
ocean waves. When the wind comes in contact with water, friction is produced 
that drives the waves. When we begin oceanography, we will study this in 
depth.

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The atmosphere transfers energy by convection � warm air rising and cool air 
sinking. Therefore, it should come as no surprise to anyone that the 
atmosphere is composed of several convection cells. These cells are 
sometimes called Hadley Cells because Hadley discovered them. There are 
twelve cells in the world � six in the Western Hemisphere and six in the 
Eastern Hemisphere. How are they situated?

 Two cells are located between 60 degrees North and 90 degrees N � one on 
each side of the world. There are two cells between 60 degrees N and 30 
degrees N � one on each side of the world. There are two cells between 30 
degrees N and 0 degrees latitude � one on each side of the world. There are 
two cells between 0 degrees latitude and 30 degrees S � one on each side of 
the world. There are two cells between 30 degrees S and 60 degrees S � one 
on each side of the world. There are two cells between 60 degrees S and 90 
degrees S � one on each side of the world. These are found in your Earth 
Science Reference Tables. At 60 degrees N and S and 30 degrees N and S there 
are jet streams, which are bands of air traveling at 200 miles an hour or 
more. These streams drive all weather in the United States west to east. 
This is why storms typically move from the Midwest to New York. 

 If you study the Earth Science Reference Tables, you will note that there 
are several areas listed as Dry and Wet. When we studied pressure, we said 
that more moisture equals low pressure. When we studied winds, we said that 
wind drives moisture. Therefore, if you look at the wind direction, you will 
see that at 0 degrees latitude and 60 degrees N and S there are wet areas 
identified because winds converge (meet) there. These areas are areas of low 
pressure. These are Earth�s low pressure belts.
 At 30 degrees N and S as well as 90 degrees N and S winds diverge 
(separate), driving moisture away, creating dry areas. These are Earth�s 
deserts. These are also areas of high pressure. These are the high pressure 
belts.

 The Equator is referred to as the Inter-Tropical Convergence Zone, or ITCZ. 
These are the tropics of the world. Winds converge in this zone. Hence, the 
name of the zone. At 30 degrees N and S are the horse latitudes. At 60 
degrees N and S are the trade winds. 0 degrees latitude is also the 
doldrums. 

 Note that winds from 60 degrees to 90 degrees N are northeast winds, from 
30 degrees to 60 degrees N are southwest winds, from 0 degrees to 30 degrees 
N are northeast winds, fro 0 degrees to 30 degrees S are southeast winds, 
from 30 degrees to 60 degrees S are northwest winds, and from 60 degrees to 
90 degrees S are southeast winds. Any east wind is a prevailing easterly and 
any west wind is called a westerly. These winds bend because of the Coriolis 
Effect. These winds also drive the ocean currents. See the Earth Science 
Reference Tables for the comparison.

 Jet streams shift with the seasons. They follow the sun�s light. That�s why 
in the summer they shift north because the North Pole is in total daylight. 
This allows southwest winds to drive in dry air, heating up our city. In the 
winter it shifts south toward the Equator because the North Pole is in total 
darkness. This allows northeast winds to strike with cold air and plenty of 
moisture. This leads to blizzards.

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So far, we have studied three weather variables � temperature, air pressure, 
and wind. Now we are able to discuss the fourth weather variable � moisture. 
We already know that, in order for moisture to enter the atmosphere, there 
must be evaporation. Evaporation is the process by which liquid water 
changes to water vapor as it heats up. Therefore, evaporation occurs when 
temperature climbs. This is because the liquid water molecules gain enough 
energy to leave the Earth�s surface. These molecules are much hotter than 
the surrounding environment. Therefore, when the water molecules leave the 
Earth�s surface, the rest of the environment remains cooler than the heated 
water. As a result, the process of evaporation is a cooling process. Just 
think of when you step out of the shower � you feel a chill as the water 
evaporates from your skin.

 Water vapor enters the atmosphere in several ways. The first way is through 
evaporation. The second way is through plants� leaves. As you know, plants 
are living organisms. They sweat. The process of plants sweating is called 
transpiration. Collectively, the total amount of evaporation and 
transpiration in the world is called evapotranspiration. The environment is 
in equilibrium when the amount of evaporation and condensation are equal.

 The rate of evaporation depends upon several factors. The first is the 
amount of energy in the area. The higher the temperature is the more 
evaporation will occur. Thus, the summer has more evaporation than the 
winter. The second factor is the surface area of the water. The bigger the 
body of water is the more interaction with air exists. This translates into 
more evaporation. Thus, coastal areas have more evaporation than areas with 
small streams. The third factor is the degree of saturation in the air. If 
the air has a great deal of water already, evaporation will be less than if 
the air is dry. Thus, the Equator has less evaporation than mid-latitudes. 
The fourth factor is wind speed. Wind drives air, so if there is moist air 
being driven out of an area by wind, there will be dryer air replacing it. 
The rate of evaporation increases. However, if dry air is being pushed out 
of an area and is replaced by moist air, evaporation is less.

 The amount of moisture in the air is called humidity. Since different 
temperatures can hold different amounts of moisture, the amount of moisture 
in the air at a given temperature is called relative humidity. Humidity is 
measured in grams of water vapor per cubic meter of air. I do not know about 
you, but I have never heard a meteorologist give this unit of measure when 
reporting humidity. Therefore, a meteorologist reports relative humidity, 
which is the percentage of moisture in the air that can be held at that 
temperature. 

 Meteorologists can calculate relative humidity by using a sling 
psychrometer. A sling psychrometer is actually two thermometers in one. The 
first thermometer measures the air temperature. This is the dry bulb 
thermometer. The second thermometer has a wet wick attached to the bulb 
which allows the water to evaporate. This is the wet bulb thermometer. The 
wet bulb will always be equal to or less than the dry bulb temperature. The 
difference between these two numbers is important. The closer they are to 
each other, the more relative humidity there is. At 100% relative humidity 
precipitation may occur because the air is fully saturated. See the Earth 
Science Reference Tables to calculate relative humidity.

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The opposite of evaporation is condensation. Condensation is the process of 
water vapor cooling into liquid water. For condensation to occur, there must 
be particles floating in the air for liquid to attach itself upon. These 
particles are called condensation nuclei. These include, but are not limited 
to, ash, chemicals, pollen, and other small substances. When the liquid 
water molecules become too heavy, they fall as precipitation. We will study 
this later. 

 The point at which condensation forms is called the dew point. The dew 
point is calculated the same way as relative humidity. Therefore, by using a 
sling psychrometer, we can calculate the relative humidity and the dew 
point. When the dry and wet bulbs are equal, the dew point is also that 
temperature. It is that temperature that you will see moisture called dew on 
the grass or your windows. When the temperature is below freezing, there 
will be frost instead. 

 Sometimes there may be fog formed from condensation. Fog is a cloud on the 
cloud. Clouds need condensation nuclei to form; therefore, fog forms when 
condensation nuclei are near the ground. Furthermore, temperature inversions 
are needed for fog to form. When the ground radiates heat on a clear night, 
the heat is lost and the air cools off rather quickly, forming radiation 
fog. When warm air blows from the south and there is snow on the ground, 
advection fog forms.

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We saw yesterday that fog is a cloud on the ground and depends upon 
condensation. Therefore, clouds in the sky also depend upon the same. Today 
we will focus upon those clouds. Cloud cover is the fifth weather variable 
that we will study.

 There are three types of clouds � 1) cirrus clouds are feathery and exist 
extremely high in the troposphere. Ice crystals are the basis of their 
formation, 2) stratus clouds are formed in the lower troposphere. They are 
layered clouds and are usually seen on a clear day, and 3) cumulus clouds 
are formed by vertical development. A cumulonimbus cloud brings rain and 
storms.

 There are four families of clouds � 1) high clouds in the upper 
troposphere, 2) middle clouds in the middle portion of the troposphere, 3) 
low clouds near the base of the troposphere, and 4) vertical clouds which 
bring moisture and storms. When a cloud is above freezing it contains 
liquid, and when it is below freezing it contains snow and ice. Near 0 
degrees Celsius contains both forms of water.

 If temperature drops below dew point, water condenses. Above the surface a 
great deal of condensation will produce clouds. The density of the cloud 
allows us to see it. Low density clouds produce haze in the atmosphere or 
fog on the ground. Cloud cover, therefore, is the amount of the sky covered 
by clouds. A cloud�s base (the bottom of the cloud) is the point in the 
atmosphere where the dew point and the air temperature are equal. For 
different clouds, this is a different altitude. We need the Generalized 
Graph for Determining Cloud Base Altitude in Appendix 3 on page 304 in the 
review book. Dashed lines are dew point temperatures and solid diagonal 
lines are air temperature. We have practiced this in class. To locate the 
cloud base, do the following:
1)	Find the temperature and dew point that you are given.
2)	From the temperature mark, follow the diagonal upward and left.
3)	From the dew point, follow the dash upward.
4)	The place of intersection is the cloud base altitude.

 The atmospheric transparency is the amount of insolation that is absorbed. 
When more clouds exist, there is more reflection, resulting in less 
transparency. When no clouds are present, more transparency exists because 
more absorption is occurring. Transparency is directly related to visibility 
(the amount of the surface you can see on a clear day expressed in miles).

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Precipitation is the falling of water from clouds in any form. Precipitation 
forms when liquid water condenses onto condensation nuclei and its weight 
increases to the point where the cloud no longer is able to support the 
weight. That is the time that precipitation occurs. This point in time is 
when the relative humidity is 100% and the dew point is the same as the 
temperature.

 There are six forms of precipitation that exists. The first is rain, which 
is liquid water falling from clouds. When the cloud is above 0 degrees 
Celsius, rain forms, regardless of the temperature on the ground. There are 
two variations of rain here. Both variations are two other forms of 
precipitation. Therefore, the second form of precipitation is drizzle. This 
is when water droplets are very fine droplets of water. They are close 
together and may fall slowly due to their size. It forms in clouds of 
temperatures more than 0 degrees Celsius. The third form of precipitation is 
freezing rain. The rain forms in clouds with temperatures more than 0 
degrees Celsius, but it falls on grounds that are lower than 0 degrees 
Celsius. The fourth type of precipitation is snow. This is solid water that 
falls on the ground. You may see snow in areas where it is warmer than the 
freezing point. This is because snow forms in clouds that have temperatures 
lower than 0 degrees Celsius, regardless of ground temperatures. The fifth 
form of precipitation is sleet. This forms in clouds above 0 degrees 
Celsius, but the clouds are in areas that are below 0 degrees Celsius. 
Therefore, it starts out as rain and freezes into ice pellets as it falls. 
The sixth form of precipitation is hail. This forms in cumulonimbus clouds. 
Hailstones start as ice crystals or frozen water droplets that collect more 
moisture over time. The hailstone falls and is kicked up by a back draft of 
wind, so that it returns to the cloud and collects more moisture, growing 
heavier and falling again until it is heavy enough to pass the back draft 
and reach the surface. 

 We measure precipitation with a rain gauge, which measures depth. Snow can 
be measured with a ruler. 10 inches of snow equals 1 inch of rain. Rain 
showers are fast and brief, like thunderstorms, while snow showers are fast 
and brief periods of snowfall.

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Since different locations receive different amounts of insolation, their 
temperatures will be different. This translates into different pressures and 
different moisture conditions. We could recognize these differences on any 
given day. A day that rains has different characteristics than a day that is 
clear. This is because air moves in blocks. We call these blocks of air �air 
masses�. The types of air masses that affect New York State are maritime air 
masses, which form over the ocean and are wet, and continental air masses, 
which form over North America and are dry. There are tropical air masses 
that form along the Tropic of Cancer and are hot, and polar air masses that 
form over Canada and are cold. Combinations of these are possible. The 
combinations are:

1)	maritime Tropical (mT) � wet and hot, forms over the central Atlantic
2)	maritime Polar (mP) � wet and cold, forms over the North Atlantic
3)	continental Tropical (cT) � dry and hot, forms over the American 
southwest
4)	continental Polar (cP) � dry and cold, forms over Canada

 Since each of these air masses have different moisture and temperature 
conditions, they have different pressure conditions. High pressure systems 
are cP and cT while low pressure systems are mT and mP. Wind in high 
pressure systems move in a clockwise direction from the center out because 
the highest pressure is inside and the lowest pressure is outside. Wind in a 
low pressure system moves in a counterclockwise direction from outside in 
because the highest pressure is on the outside. High pressure systems have 
clear weather because they are dry while low pressure systems have stormy 
weather because they are wet.

 The boundary between two air masses is called a front. A warm front is the 
front of a warm air mass, a cold front is the front of a cold air mass, a 
polar front is the front of bitterly cold air, a stationary front is the 
front of an air mass that is hot and cold and won�t move, and an occluded 
front is a combination of a polar front with another front.
When fronts meet each other, warm air rises over cold air, cools off, 
condenses, and forms clouds that will ultimately bring rain. That is how 
storms are born. 

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Storms are violent disturbances in the atmosphere that create dangerous 
conditions on the surface. Characteristics of storms include heavy 
precipitation, strong winds, fronts, and low pressure. All storms that 
affect New York State are called mid-latitude cyclones, or cyclonic storms. 
Warm air is lifted over polar fronts and form low pressure that rotates due 
to the Coriolis Effect. 

 One such storm is a hurricane. These storms form over tropical waters in 
the Atlantic Ocean near Africa. They gain energy from the evaporation of 
millions of gallons of water from insolation. The pressure gradients formed 
as a result create winds of at least 74 miles an hour. Different parts of 
the world call these storms hurricanes, typhoons, or cyclones, but they are 
all the same. They all have clouds full of precipitation, an eye in the 
center with the lowest pressure, and winds higher than 150 miles an hour. 
Once a hurricane reaches land or cold water, it loses energy. Friction with 
the ground kills a hurricane over land. Floods form on land and debris flies 
due to the high winds.

 A second type of storm is a thunderstorm. There are about 2000 
thunderstorms at any point in time on Earth. These storms bring heavy 
precipitation, thunder, and lightning. Severe enough thunderstorm clouds 
could bring hail. Thunderstorm clouds are called cumulonimbus clouds. These 
clouds form when warm air is forced to rise above cold air quickly. This 
could occur along a cold front, in a warm air mass that comes in contact 
with cool ground, or in a hurricane. The warm air rises, condenses, and 
forms the clouds. There is constant upward movement forming the cloud while 
precipitation falls at the same time. These two movements produce opposite 
charges, expelling lightning, and producing thunder. Characteristics of 
these storms include hail, high winds, lightning, and heavy rain. To avoid 
being struck by lightning, lie down in an open area, stay in a car, don�t 
touch electrical appliances, stay off the phone, etc.

 A third type of storm is a tornado. Tornadoes are the most violent storm. 
They are rapidly rotating, extremely low pressure funnel winds that hang 
down from cumulonimbus clouds towards Earth�s surface. They must reach the 
surface to be a tornado. They are narrow, but they can cover quite a 
distance. They could reach speeds of at least 318 miles an hour, though it 
is believed they can reach 350 miles an hour. We do not understand their 
formation, but they form in late afternoon when it is warmest, and when 
fronts that have a wide difference in temperature meet. The extremely low 
pressure in a tornado �vacuums� up materials. Hide in a basement to avoid 
danger.

 The last storm is a blizzard. These storms have wind speeds of at least 35 
miles an hour and heavy falling/blowing snow. They form at fronts during 
winter. These disrupt life in general in many ways. Stay indoors where it is 
warm.

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It is important to be able to predict the weather so that people know what 
to prepare for the day to avoid danger when they step outside. All forecasts 
are based upon the probability of an occurrence taking place. Meteorologists 
use statistics from the past to create the forecasts they generate for us. 
These statistics are collected over a wide time frame (ex: 30 years). Based 
on these statistics, they could read the signs and produce their forecast. 
Statistics are collected using satellites in space, radar detection of 
electromagnetic energy waves off clouds, and Doppler technology that detects 
echoes and changing weather conditions. Some simple relationships used by 
meteorologists to forecast the weather are:

1)	Air pressure is associated with changes in temperature.
2)	Precipitation will occur as air temperature and dew point get closer 
together. 
3)	If the air pressure gradient increases, so does wind speed. 

 All the statistics collected are put onto a weather map, where a circle is 
plotted to represent the city where the statistics were collected. The 
circle is the station and all symbols used there are the model. Therefore, 
weather maps use station models. The complete list of symbols is in the 
Earth Science Reference Tables. To create the model, plot the temperature 
(without units) in the upper left, dew point (without units) in the lower 
left, the visibility and the type of precipitation in the middle left in 
that order from left to right. Air pressure is plotted in the upper right 
using the last three numbers and no decimals, the amount of precipitation is 
in the lower right, and the barometric trend is in the middle right. There 
is no decimal here so the number is read as a decimal (it is understood that 
way). For example, a pressure of 33 is read as �3.3�. A �+� in front of the 
pressure is an increase in pressure, a �-� in front of the pressure is a 
decrease in pressure. A �/� after the pressure means that pressure is 
rising, a backwards �/� after the pressure means that pressure is falling, 
and �-� after the pressure means that pressure is steady. Wind direction is 
a line on the side of the compass that represents the wind direction. A 
south wind is on the south side of the station while a northwest wind is on 
the northwest side. Wind speed is represented by feathers on the line for 
wind speed. A full feather is 10 knots while a half feather is 5 knots. A 
wind speed of 15 knots is a full feather and a half feather. 

 If you need to read the model, keep these in mind. They will help. For 
example, if a model has a pressure of 132, the air pressure is 1013.2 
millibars. If it has a pressure of 999, air pressure is 999.9 millibars. All 
pressure readings that are 500 or less start with �10� while all pressure 
readings more than 500 start with �9�. 

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