A
Absolute humidity The mass of water vapor in a given volume of air. It represents
the density of water vapor in the air.
Absolute zero A temperature of -273ºC, -460ºF, or
0ºK. Theoretically, there is no molecular motion at this temperature.
Absorptivity The efficiency of radiation absorption.
Acclimatization The gradual adjustment of the body to new
climatic or other environmental conditions, for example, the adjustment
to low levels of oxygen at high altitudes.
Accretion The growth of a precipitation particle by the collision
of an ice crystal or snowflake with a supercooled liquid droplet that freezes
upon impact.
Actual evapotranspiraton The rate of water lost from vegetation
and soil, ordinarily at a slower rate than the potential rate.
Actual vapor pressure See vapor pressure.
Adiabatic process A process that takes place without a transfer
of heat between the system (such as an air parcel) and its surroundings.
In an adiabatic process compression always results in warming, and expansion
results in cooling.
Advection The horizontal transfer of any atmospheric property
by the wind.
Advection fog Occurs when warm, moist air moves over a cold
surface and the air cools to below its dew point.
Aerovane A device that resembles a wind vane with a propeller
at one end. Used to indicate wind speed and direction.
Air density Mass per unit volume of air; about 1.275 km per
cubic meter at 0ºC and 1000 millibars.
Air mass A large expanse of air having similar temperature
and humidity at any given height.
Air pressure The cumulative force exerted on any surface by
the molecules composing air.
Albedo The percent of radiation returning from a surface compared
to that which strikes it.
Altimeter An instrument that indicates the altitude of an
object above a fixed level. Pressure altimeters use an aneroid barometer
with a scale graduated in altitude instead of pressure.
Altocumulus A middle cloud, usually white or gray. Often occurs
in layers or patches with wavy, rounded masses or rolls.
Altocumulus castellanus An altocumulus showing vertical development,
individual cloud elements have towerlike tops, often in the shape of tiny
castles.
Altocumulus lenticularis A lens-shaped altocumulus cloud;
a mountain-wave cloud generated by the disturbance of horizontal airflow
caused by a prominent mountain range.
Altostratus A middle cloud composed of gray or bluish sheets
or layers of uniform appearance. In the thinner regions, the sun or moon
usually appears dimly visible.
Ambient air The air surrounding a cloud, or the air surrounding
rising or sinking air parcels.
Ambient temperature Temperature of the surrounding (ambient)
air.
Anemometer An instrument designed to measure wind speed.
Aneroid barometer An instrument designed to measure atmospheric
pressure. It contains no liquid.
Annual range of temperature The difference between the warmest
and coldest months at any given location.
Anomalies Departures of temperature, precipitation, or other
weather elements from long-term averages.
Arctic air A very cold and dry air mass that forms primarily
in winter and the northern interior of North America.
Atmospheric window A region of the electromagnetic spectrum
from 8 to 12 µm where the atmosphere is transparent to radiation.
Autumnal equinox The equinox at which the sun approaches the
Southern Hemisphere and passes directly over the equator. Occurs around
September 23.
B
Barograph A recording instrument that provides a continuous trace of air
pressure variation with time.
Barometer An instrument that measures atmospheric pressure.
The two most common barometers are the mercury barometer and the aneroid
barometer.
Beaufort scale A scale of wind strength based on visual assessment
of the effects of wind on seas and vegetation.
Black body A hypothetical object that absorbs all of the radiation
that strikes it. It also emits radiation at a maximum rate for its given
temperature.
Blizzard A severe weather condition characterized by low temperatures
and strong winds (greater than 32 mi/hr) bearing a great amount of snow.
When these conditions continue after the falling snow has ended, it is termed
a ground blizzard.
Bora A cold katabatic wind that originates in Yugoslavia and
flows onto the coastal plain of the Adriatic Sea.
Bowen ratio The ratio of energy available for sensible heating
to energy available for latent heating.
Boyle's law When the temperature is held constant, the pressure
and density of an ideal gas are directly proportional.
C
Ceilometer An instrument that automatically records cloud height.
Centrifugal force A force directed outward, away from the
center of a rotating object; equal in magnitude to the centripetal force
but in the opposite direction.
Centripetal force An inward-directed force that confines an
object to a circular path; equal in magnitude to the centrifugal force but
in the opposite direction.
Charles's law With constant pressure, the temperature of an
ideal gas is inversely proportional to the density of the gas.
Chinook A warm, dry wind on the eastern side of the Rocky
Mountains. In the Alps, the wind is called a Foehn.
Cirrocumulus A high cloud that appears as a white patch of
cloud without shadows. It consists of very small elements in the form of
grains or ripples.
Cirrostratus A high cloud appearing as a whitish veil that
may totally cover the sky. Often produces halo phenomena.
Cirrus A high cloud composed of ice crystals in the form of
thin, white, featherlike clouds in patches, filaments, or narrow bands.
Climate The accumulation of daily and seasonal weather events
over a long period of time. A description of aggregate weather conditions;
the sum of all statistical weather information that helps describe a place
or region.
Cloud base The lowest portion of a cloud.
Cloudburst Any sudden and heavy rain shower.
Cloud cover The amount of the sky obscured by clouds when
observed at a particular location.
Cloud deck The top of a cloud layer, usually viewed from an
aircraft.
Cloud seeding The introduction of artificial substances (usually
silver iodide or dry ice) into a cloud for the purpose of either modifying
its development or increasing its precipitation.
Coalescence The merging of cloud droplets into a single larger
droplet.
Cold fog See Supercooled cloud.
Cold front The leading edge of a cold air mass.
Condensation Process by which water changes phase from a vapor
to a liquid.
Condensation nuclei Small particles in the atmosphere that
serve as the core of tiny condensing cloud droplets. These may be dust,
salt, or other material.
Conduction The transfer of heat by molecular activity from
one substance to another, or through a substance. Transfer is always from
warmer to colder regions.
Continental air mass An air mass that forms over land; it
is normally relatively dry.
Continental Climate A climate lacking marine influence and
characterized by more extreme temperatures than in marine climates: therefore,
it has a relatively high annual temperature range for its latitude.
Continental polar air Relatively dry air mass that develops
over the northern interior of North America; very cold in winter and mild
in summer.
Continental tropical air Warm, dry air mass that forms over
the subtropical deserts of the south-western United States.
Contrail (condensation trail) A cloudlike streamer frequently
seen forming behind aircraft flying in clear, cold, humid air.
Convection Motions in a fluid that result in the transport
and mixing of the fluid's properties. In meteorology, convection usually
refers to atmospheric motions that are predominantly vertical, such as rising
air currents due to surface heating. The rising of heated surface air and
the sinking of cooler air aloft is often called free convection. (Compare
with forced convection.)
Convective condensation level (CCL) The level above the surface
marking the base of a cumiliform cloud that is forming due to surface heating
and rising thermals.
Convergence An atmospheric condition that exists when the
winds cause a horizontal net inflow of air into a specified region.
Cooling degree-day A form of degree-day used in estimating
the amount of energy necessary to reduce the effective temperature of warm
air. A cooling degree-day is a day on which the average temperature is one
degree above a desired base temperature.
Coriolis effect A deflective force arising from the rotation
of the earth on its axis; affects principally synoptic-scale and global-scale
winds. Winds are deflected to the right of the initial direction in the
Northern Hemisphere, and to the left in the Southern Hemisphere.
Crepuscular rays Alternating light and dark bands of light
that appear to fan out from the sun's position, usually at twilight.
Cumulonimbus An exceptionally dense and vertically developed
cloud, often with a top in the shape of an anvil. The cloud is frequently
accompanied by heavy showers, lightning, thunder, and sometimes hail. It
is also known as a thunderstorm cloud.
Cumulus A cloud in the form of individual, detached domes
or towers that are usually dense and well defined. It has a flat base with
a bulging upper part that often resembles cauliflower. Cumulus clouds of
fair weather are called cumulus humilis. Those that exhibit much vertical
growth are called cumulus congestur or towering cumulus.
Cumulus Congestus An upward building convective cloud with
vertical development between that of a cumulus cloud and a cumulonimbus.
Cup anemometer An instrument used to monitor wind-speed. Wind
rotation of cups generates and electric current calibrated in wind speed.
Cutoff high Anticyclonic circulation system that separates
from the prevailing westerly airflow and therefore remains stationary.
Cutoff low Cyclonic circulation system that separates from
the prevailing westerly airflow and therefore remains stationary.
D
Daily range of temperature The difference between the maximum and minimum
temperatures for any given day.
Degree days Computed from each day's mean temperature (max+min/2).
For each degree that a day's mean temperature is below or above a reference
temperature is counted as one degree day.
Density The ratio of the mass of a substance to the volume
occupied by it.
Deposition A process that occurs in subfreezing air when water
vapor changes directly to ice without becoming a liquid first. (Also called
sublimation in meteorology.)
Deposition nuclei Tiny particles in the atmosphere that serve
as the core of tiny ice crystals as water vapor changes to the solid form.
These are also called ice nuclei.
Desert One of two types of dry climate-the driest of the dry
climates.
Dew Water that has condensed onto objects near the ground
when their temperatures have fallen below the dew point of the surface air.
Dew point (dew-point temperature) The temperature to which
air must be cooled (at constant pressure and constant water vapor content)
for saturation to occur. When the dew point falls below freezing it is called
the frost point.
Diffraction The bending of light around objects, such as cloud
and fog droplets, producing fringes of light and dark or colored bands.
Diffuse insolation Solar radiation that is scattered or reflected
by atmospheric components (clouds, for example) to the earth's surface.
Direct insolation Solar radiation that is transmitted directly
through the atmosphere to the earth's surface without interacting with atmospheric
components.
Divergence An atmospheric condition that exists when the winds
cause a horizontal net outflow of air from a specific region.
Downbursts A severe localized downdraft that can be experienced
beneath a severe thunderstorm. (Compare Microburst)
Downdraft Downward moving air, usually within a thunderstorm
cell.
Drainage basin A fixed geographical region from which a river
and its tributaries drain water.
Drizzle Small drops between 0.2 and 0.5 mm in diameter that
fall slowly and reduce visibility more than light rain.
Drought A period of abnormally dry weather sufficiently long
enough to cause serious effects on agriculture and other activities in the
affected area.
Dry adiabatic rate The rate of change of temperature in a
rising or descending unsaturated air parcel. The rate of adiabatic cooling
or warming is 10ºC per 1000 m (5.5ºF per 1000 ft).
Dry climate A climate in which yearly precipitation is not
as great as the potential loss of water by evaporation.
Dust devil (or whirlwind) A small but rapidly rotating wind
made visible by the dust, sand, and debris it picks up from the surface.
It develops best on clear, dry, hot afternoons.
E
Eddy A small volume of air (or any fluid) that behaves differently from
the larger flow in which it exists.
Effective emissivity A correction factor, dependent on the
radiational characteristics of the earth -atmosphere system, that permits
application of black body radiation laws to the earth-atmosphere system
Emissivity The fractional amount of radiation emitted by a
given object or substance in comparison to the amount emitted by a perfect
emitter.
Emittance The rate at which a black body radiates energy across
all wave-lengths.
Entrainment The mixing of environmental air into a preexisting
air current or cloud so that the environmental air becomes part of the current
or cloud.
Environmental lapse rate The rate of decrease of temperature
with elevation. It is most often measured with a radiosonde.
Equilibrium vapor pressure The necessary vapor pressure around
liquid water that allows the water to remain in equilibrium with its environment.
Also called saturation vapor pressure.
Equinox The time when the sun crosses the plane of the earth's
equator occurring about March 21 and September 22.
Evaporation The process by which a liquid changes into a gas.
Evapotranspiration Vaporization of water through direct evaporation
from wet surfaces and the release of water vapor by vegetation.
Evaporation fog Fog produced when sufficient water vapor is
added to the air by evaporation. The two common types are steam fog, which
forms when cold air moves over warm water, and frontal fog, which forms
as warm raindrops evaporate in a cool air mass.
Exosphere The outermost portion of the atmosphere.
F
Fall Freeze date The date of occurrence in the fall of the first minimum
at or below a temperature threshold.
Fall streaks Falling ice crystals that evaporate before reaching
the ground.
Foehn See Chinook.
Fog A cloud with its base at the earth's surface. It reduces
visibility to below 1 km.
Forced convection On a small scale, a form of mechanical stirring
taking place when twisting eddies of air are able to mix.
Free convection Convection triggered by intense solar heating
of the earth's surface.
Freeze A condition occurring over a widespread area when the
surface air temperature remains below freezing for a sufficient time to
damage certain agricultural crops. A freeze most often occurs as cold air
is advected into a region, causing freezing conditions to exist in a deep
layer of surface air. Also called advection frost.
Freeze free season The number of days between the last spring
freeze date and the first fall freeze date.
Freezing rain and freezing drizzle Rain or drizzle that falls
in liquid form and then freezes upon striking a cold object or ground. Both
can produce a coating of ice on objects which is called glaze.
Front The transition zone between two distinct air masses.
Frontal fog See Evaporation fog.
Frost (also called hoarfrost) A covering of ice produced by
deposition (sublimation) on exposed surfaces when the air temperature falls
below the frost point (the dew point is below freezing).
Frost point See Dew point.
Frozen dew The transformation of liquid dew into tiny beads
of ice when the air temperature drops below freezing.
Funnel cloud A rotating conelike cloud that extends down-ward
from the base of a thunderstorm. When it reaches the surface it is called
a tornado.
G
Geostrophic wind A theoretical horizontal wind blowing in a straight path,
parallel to the isobars or contours, at a constant speed. The geostrophic
wind results when the Coriolis force exactly balances the horizontal pressure
gradient force.
Glaciation The conversion of all the supercooled liquid water
in a cloud into ice crystals, thus reducing the growth rate of ice crystals
and hail.
Glaciated cloud A cloud or portion of a cloud where only ice
crystals exist.
Glaze A coating of ice on objects formed when supercooled
rain freezes on contact. A storm that produces glaze is called an icing
storm.
Glory Colored rings that appear around the shadow of an object.
Graupel See Snow pellets
Green flash A small, green color that occasionally appears
on the upper part of the sun as it rises or sets.
Ground fog See Radiation fog.
Growing degree-day A form of the degree-day used as a guide
for crop planting and for estimating crop maturity dates.
Growing season The number of days between the last spring
freeze date and the first fall freeze date.
H
Haboob A dust or sandstorm that forms as cold downdrafts from a thunderstorm
turbulently lift dust and sand into the air.
Hail Solid precipitation in the form of chunks or balls of
ice with diameters greater than 5 mm. The stones fall from cumulonimbus
clouds.
Hailstones Transparent or partially opaque particles of ice
that range in size from that of a pea to that of golf balls.
Hair hygrometer An instrument used to monitor relative humidity
by measuring the changes in the length of human hair that accompany humidity
variations.
Halos Rings or arcs that encircle the sun or moon when seen
through an ice crystal cloud or a sky filled with falling ice crystals.
Halos are produced by refraction of light.
Haze Fine dry or wet dust or salt particles dispersed through
a portion of the atmosphere. Individually these are not visible but cumulatively
they will diminish visibility.
Heat A form of energy transferred between systems by virtue
of their temperature differences.
Heat capacity The ratio of the heat absorbed (or released)
by a system to the corresponding temperature rise (or fall).
Heat index (HI) An index that combines air temperature and
relative humidity to determine an apparent temperature-how hot it actually
feels.
Heat of fusion Heat released when water changes phase from
liquid to solid; 80 calories per gram
Heat of melting Heat required to change the phase of water
from solid to liquid; 80 calories per gram.
Heating degree-day A form of the degree-day used as an index
for fuel consumption. Needed on days when average air temperature falls
below 69 ºF (18 ºC); computed by subtracting the day's average
temperature from 65 ºF.
Heat lightning Distant lightning that illuminates the sky
but is too far away for its thunder to be heard.
Heiligenschein A faint white ring surrounding the shadow of
an observer's head on a dew-covered lawn.
Heterosphere The atmosphere above 80 km (50 mi) where gases
are stratified, with concentrations of the heavier gases decreasing more
rapidly with altitude than concentrations of the lighter gases.
High inversion fog A fog that lifts above the surface but
does not completely dissipate because of a strong inversion (usually subsidence)
that exists above the fog layer.
Highland climate Complex pattern of climate conditions associated
with mountains. Highland climates are characterized by large differences
that occur over short distances.
Hoarfrost Fernlike crystals of ice that form by deposition
of water vapor on twigs, tree branches, and other vegetation.
Homosphere The atmosphere up to 80 km (50 mi) in which the
proportionality of principal gaseous constituents, such as oxygen and nitrogen,
is constant.
Humid continental climate A relatively severe climate characteristic
of broad continents in the middle latitudes between approximately 40 and
50º north latitude. This climate is not found in the southern hemisphere,
where the middle latitudes are dominated by the oceans.
Humid Subtropical Climate A climate generally located on the
eastern side of a continent and characterized by hot, sultry summers and
cool winters.
Hurricane A severe tropical cyclone having winds in excess
of 64 knots (74 mi/hr).
Hydrograph An instrument that provides a continuous trace
of relative humidity with time.
Hygrometer An instrument designed to measure the air's water
vapor content. The sensing part of the instrument can be hair (hair hygrometer),
a plate coated with carbon (electrical hygrometer), or an infrared sensor
(infrared hygrometer).
Hypothermia The deterioration in one's mental and physical
condition brought on by a rapid lowering of human body temperature.
I
Ice Cap Climate A climate that has no monthly means above freezing and supports
no vegetative cover except in a few scattered high mountain areas. This
climate, with its perpetual ice and snow, is confined largely to the ice
sheets of Greenland and Antarctica.
Ice fog A type of fog composed of tiny suspended ice particles
that forms at very low temperatures.
Ice nuclei Particles that act as nuclei for the formation
of ice crystals in the atmosphere.
Ice pellets See Sleet
Indian summer An unseasonably warm spell with clear skies
near the middle of autumn. Usually follows a substantial period of cool
weather.
Infrared radiation Electromagnetic radiation with wavelengths
between about 0.7 and 1000 µm. This radiation is longer than visible
radiation but shorter than microwave radiation.
Insolation The incoming solar radiation that reaches the earth
and the atmosphere.
Intertropical convergence zone (ITCZ) The boundary zone separating
the northeast trade winds of the Northern Hemisphere from the southeast
trade winds of the Southern Hemisphere.
Inversion An increase in air temperature with height.
Ion An electrically charged atom, molecule, or particle.
Ionosphere An electrified region of the upper atmosphere where
fairly large concentrations of ions and free electrons exist.
Iridescence Brilliant spots or borders of colors, most often
red and green, observed in clouds up to about 30º from the sun.
Isobar A line connecting points of equal pressure
Isotach A line connecting points of equal wind speed.
Isotherm A line connecting points of equal wind temperature.
J
January thaw A period of relatively mild weather around January 20 to 23
that occurs primarily in New England; an example of a singularity in the
climatic record.
Jet stream Relatively strong winds concentrated within a narrow
band in the atmosphere.
K
Katabatic wind Any wind blowing downslope. Usually cold.
L
Lake breeze A wind blowing onshore from the surface of a lake.
Lake-effect snows Localized snowstorms that form on the downwind
side of a lake. Such storms are common in late fall and early winter near
the Great Lakes as cold, dry air picks up moisture and warmth from the unfrozen
bodies of water.
Land breeze A coastal breeze that blows from land to sea,
usually at night.
Lapse rate The rate at which an atmospheric variable (usually
temperature) decreases with height. (See Environmental lapse rate.)
Latent heat The heat that is either released or absorbed by
a unit mass of a substance when it undergoes a change of state, such as
during evaporation, condensation, or sublimation.
Lenticular cloud A cloud in the shape of a lens.
Lightning A visible electrical discharge produced by thunderstorms.
Longwave radiation A term most often used to describe the
infrared energy emitted by the earth and the atmosphere.
M
Magnetosphere The region around the earth in which the earth's magnetic
field plays a dominant part in controlling the physical processes that take
place.
Mammatus clouds Clouds that look like pouches hanging from
the underside of a cloud.
Marine climate A climate dominated by the ocean, because of
the moderating effect of water, sites having this climate are considered
relatively mild.
Maritime air mass An air mass that originates over the ocean.
These air masses are relatively humid.
Maritime polar air Cool, humid air mass that forms over the
cold ocean waters of the North Pacific and North Atlantic.
Maritime tropical air Warm, humid air mass that forms over
tropical and subtropical oceans.
Mean annual temperature The average temperature at any given
location for the entire year.
Mesoscale The scale of meteorological phenomena that ranges
in size from a few km to about 100 km. It includes local winds, thunderstorms,
and tornadoes.
Mesosphere The atmospheric layer between the stratosphere
and the thermosphere. Located at an average elevation between 50 and 80
km above the earth's surface.
Meteorology The study of the atmosphere and atmospheric phenomena
as well as the atmosphere's interaction with the earth's surface, oceans,
and life in general.
Microburst A strong localized downdraft less than 4 km wide
that occurs beneath severe thunderstorms. A strong downdraft greater than
4 km across is called a downburst.
Microclimate The climate structure of the air space near the
surface of the earth.
Microscale The smallest scale of atmospheric motions.
Millibar(mb) A unit for expressing atmospheric pressure. Sea
level pressure is normally close to 1013 mb.
Mirage A refraction phenomenon that makes an object appear
to be displaced from its true position. When an object appears higher than
it actually is, it is called a superior image. When an object appears lower
than it actually is, it is an inferior mirage.
Mist Very thin fog in which visibility is greater than 1.0
km (0.62 mi).
Mistral A katabatic wind that flows from the Alps down the
Rhone River Valley of France to the Mediterranean coast.
Mixing ratio The ratio of the mass of water vapor in a given
volume of air to the mass of dry air.
Moist adiabatic rate The rate of change of temperature in
a rising or descending saturated air parcel. The rate of cooling or warming
varies but a common value of 6ºC per 1000 m (3.3ºF per 1000 ft)
is used.
Molecular viscosity The small-scale internal fluid friction
that is due to the random motion of the molecules within a smooth-flowing
fluid, such as air.
Mountain and valley breeze A local wind system of a mountain
valley that blows downhill (mountain breeze) at night and uphill (valley
breeze) during the day.
N
Nacreous clouds Clouds of unknown composition that have a soft, pearly luster
and that form at altitudes about 25 to 30 km above the earth's surface.
They are also called mother-of-pearl clouds.
Nimbostratus A dark, gray cloud characterized by more or less
continuously falling precipitation. It is not accompanied by lightning,
thunder, or hail.
Noctilucent clouds Wavy, thin, bluish-white clouds that are
best seen at twilight in polar latitudes. They form at altitudes about 80
to 90 km above the surface.
Nocturnal inversion See Radiation inversion.
O
Offshore breeze A breeze that blows from the land out over the water. Opposite
of an onshore breeze.
Onshore breeze A breeze that blows from the water onto the
land. Opposite of an offshore breeze.
Orographic uplift The lifting of air over a topographic barrier.
Clouds that form in this lifting process are called orographic clouds.
Orographic precipitation Rainfall or snowfall from clouds,
induced by topographic uplift.
P
Permafrost A layer of soil beneath the earth's surface that remains frozen
throughout the year.
Photodissociation The splitting of a molecule by a photon.
Photon A discrete quantity of energy that can be thought of
as a packet of electromagnetic radiation traveling at the speed of light.
Pileus cloud A smooth cloud in the form of a cap. Occurs above,
or is attached to, the top of a cumuliform cloud.
Polar air mass A cold air mass that forms in a high-latitude
source region.
Polar climates Climates in which the mean temperature of the
warmest month is below 10ºC; climates that are too cold to support
the growth of trees.
Potential energy The energy that a body possesses by virtue
of its position with respect to other bodies in the field of gravity.
Potential evapotranspiration (PE) The amount of moisture that,
if it were available, would be removed from a given land area by evaporation
and transpiration.
Potential temperature The temperature that a parcel of dry
air would have if it were brought dry adiabatically from its original position
to a pressure of 1000 mb.
Precipitable water vapor The depth of water that would result
if all the vapor in the atmosphere above a location were condensed into
liquid water.
Precipitation Any form of water particles-liquid or solid-that
falls from the atmosphere and reaches the ground.
Prevailing wind The wind direction most frequently observed
during a given period.
Probability forecast A forecast of the probability of occurrence
of one or more of a mutually exclusive set of weather conditions.
Psychrometer An instrument used to measure the water vapor
content of the air. It consists of two thermometers (dry bulb and wet bulb).
After whirling the instrument, the dew point and relative humidity can be
obtained with the aid of tables.
Pyranometer An instrument that measures the amount of radiation.
Q R
Radar An instrument useful for remote sensing of meteorological phenomena.
It operates by sending radio waves and monitoring those returned by such
reflecting objects as raindrops within clouds.
Radiant energy (radiation) Energy propagated in the form of
electromagnetic waves. These waves do not need molecules to propagate them,
and in a vacuum they travel at nearly 300,000 km per sec.
Radiation fog Fog produced over land when radiational cooling
reduces the air temperature to or below its dew point. It is also known
as ground fog and valley fog.
Radiation inversion An increase in temperature with height
due to radiational cooling of the earth's surface. Also called a nocturnal
inversion.
Radiosonde A balloon-borne instrument that measures and transmits
pressure, temperature, and humidity to a ground-based receiving station.
Rain Precipitation in the form of liquid water drops that
have diameters greater than that of drizzle.
Rain gage A device-usually a cylindrical container-for measuring
rain-fall.
Rain Shadow The region on the leeside of a mountain where
the precipitation is noticeable less than on the windward side.
Rawinsonde An instrument carried by weather balloons to measure
the temperature, humidity, pressure, and winds of the atmosphere.
Reflection The process whereby a surface turns back a portion
of the radiation that strikes it.
Refraction The bending of light as it passes from one medium
to another
Refractive index The ratio of the speed of light in a vacuum
to its speed in a transparent medium.
Relative humidity The ratio of the amount of water vapor actually
in the air compared to the amount of water vapor the air can hold at the
particular temperature and pressure. The ratio of the air's actual vapor
pressure to its saturation vapor pressure.
Rime ice A white, granular deposit of ice formed by the freezing
of water drops when they come in contact with an object.
S
Santa Ana The local name given a foehn wind in southern California.
Saturation vapor pressure The maximum amount of water vapor
necessary to keep moist air in equilibrium with a surface of pure water
or ice. It represents the maximum amount of water vapor that the air can
hold at any given temperature and pressure. (See Equilibrium vapor pressure.)
Scattering The process by which small particles in the atmosphere
deflect radiation from its path into different directions.
Scintillation The apparent twinkling of a star due to its
light passing through regions of differing air densities in the atmosphere.
Sea breeze A coastal local wind that blows from the ocean
onto the land. The leading edge of the breeze is termed a sea breeze front.
Sea level pressure The atmospheric pressure at mean sea level.
Semiarid See Steppe.
Sensible heat transfer Movement of heat from one place to
another as a consequence of conduction or convection or both.
Sensible temperature The sensation of temperature that the
human body feels in contrast to the actual temperature of the environment
as measured with a thermometer.
Shear See wind shear.
Sheet lightning A fairly bright lightning flash from distant
thunderstorms that illuminates a portion of the cloud.
Shortwave radiation A term most often used to describe the
radiant energy emitted from the sun, in the visible and near ultraviolet
wavelengths.
Shower Intermittent precipitation from a cumuliform cloud,
usually of short duration but often heavy.
Sleet A type of precipitation consisting of transparent pellets
of ice 5 mm or less in diameter. Same as ice pellets.
Smog Originally smog meant a mixture of smoke and fog. Today,
smog means air that has restricted visibility due to pollution, or pollution
formed in the presence of sunlight-photochemical smog.
Snow Solid precipitation in the form of minute ice flakes
that occur below 0ºC.
Snowflake An aggregate of ice crystals that falls from a cloud
Snow flurries Light showers of snow that fall intermittently.
Snow grains Precipitation in the form of very small, opaque
grains of ice. The solid equivalent of drizzle.
Snow pellets White, opaque, approximately round ice particles
between 2 and 5 mm in diameter that form in a cloud either from the sticking
together of ice crystals or from the process of accretion.
Snow rollers A cylindrical spiral of snow shaped somewhat
like a child's muff and produced by the wind.
Snow squall (shower) An intermittent heavy shower of snow
that greatly reduces visibility.
Solstice Either of the two times of the year when the sun
is the greatest distance from the celestial equator, occurring about June
22 and December 22. See winter solstice and summer solstice.
Southern oscillation The reversal of surface air pressure
at opposite ends of the tropical Pacific Ocean that occur during El Nino
events.
Specific heat The ratio of the heat absorbed (or released)
by the unit mass of the system to the corresponding temperature rise (or
fall).
Specific humidity The ratio of the mass of water vapor in
a given parcel to the total mass of air in the parcel.
Spontaneous nucleation (freezing) The freezing of pure water
without the benefit of any nuclei.
Spring freeze date The date of occurrence in the spring of
the last minimum at or below a temperature threshold.
Squall line Any nonfrontal line or band of active thunderstorms.
Station pressure The actual air pressure computed at the observing
station.
Steam fog See Evaporation fog.
Steppe One of the two types of dry climate. A marginal and
more humid variant of the desert that separates it from bordering humid
climates. Steppe also refers to the short-grass vegetation associated with
this semiarid climate.
Storm surge An abnormal rise of the sea along a shore. Primarily
due to the winds of a storm, especially a hurricane.
Stratocumulus A low cloud, predominantly stratiform with low,
lumpy, rounded masses, often with blue sky between them.
Stratopause The boundary between the stratosphere and the
mesosphere.
Stratosphere The layer of the atmosphere above the troposphere
and below the mesosphere (between 10 km and 50 km), generally characterized
by an increase in temperature with height.
Stratus A low, gray cloud layer with a rather uniform base
whose precipitation is most commonly drizzle.
Subarctic climate A climate found north of the humid continental
climate and south of the polar climate and characterized by bitterly cold
winters and short cool summers. Places within this climatic realm experience
the highest annual temperature ranges on earth.
Sublimation The process whereby ice changes directly into
water vapor without melting. In meteorology, sublimation can also mean the
transformation of water vapor into ice. (See Deposition.)
Subsidence The slow sinking of air, usually associated wit
high-pressure areas.
Subsidence inversion A temperature inversion produced by the
adiabatic warming of a layer of sinking air.
Summer solstice Approximately June 22 in the Northern Hemisphere
when the sun is highest in the sky and directly overhead at latitude 23.5º
N, the Tropic of Cancer.
Sundog A colored luminous spot produced by refraction of light
through ice crystals that appears on either side of the sun. Also called
parhelion.
Sun pillar A vertical streak of light extending above (or
below) the sun. It is produced by the reflection of sunlight of ice crystals.
Supersaturated air A condition that occurs in the atmosphere
when the relative humidity is greater that 100 percent.
Surface inversion See Radiation inversion
Synoptic scale The typical weather map scale that shows features
such as high- and low-pressure areas and fronts over a distance spanning
a continent. Also called the cyclonic scale.
T
Taiga The northern coniferous forest; also a name applied to the subarctic
climate.
Temperature The degree of hotness or coldness of a substance
as measured by a thermometer. It is also a measure of the average speed
or kinetic energy of the atoms and molecules in a substance.
Temperature inversion An extremely stable air layer in which
temperature increases with altitude, the inverse of the usual temperature
profile in the troposphere.
Terminal velocity The constant speed obtained by a falling
object when the upward drag on the object balances the downward force of
gravity.
Thermal A small, rising parcel of warm air produced when the
earth's surface is heated unevenly.
Thermograph A recording instrument that gives a continuous
trace of temperature with time.
Thermometer An instrument used to measure temperature.
Thermosphere The atmospheric layer above the mesosphere. It
extends from 90 km to outer space.
Thunder The sound due to rapidly expanding gases along the
channel of a lightning discharge.
Tipping bucket rain gage A device that accumulates rainfall
in increments of 0.01 in. by containers that alternately fill and empty
(tip).
Tornado An intense, rotating column of air that protrudes
from a cumulonimbus cloud in the shape of a funnel or a rope and touches
the ground. (See Funnel cloud.)
Trade winds The winds that occupy most of the tropics and
blow from the subtropical highs to the equatorial low.
Transpiration The release of water vapor to the atmosphere
by plants.
Tropical air mass A warm-to-hot air mass that forms in the
subtropics.
Tropical depression A mass of thunderstorms and clouds generally
with a cyclonic wind circulation of between 20 and 34 knots
Tropical disturbance An organized mass of thunderstorms with
a slight cyclonic wind circulation of less than 20 knots.
Tropical storm Organized thunderstorms with a cyclonic wind
circulation between 35 and 64 knots.
Tropopause The boundary between the troposphere and the stratosphere.
Troposphere The layer of the atmosphere extending from the
earth's surface up to the tropopause (about 10 km above the ground).
Tundra Climate Found almost exclusively in the northern hemisphere
or at high altitudes in many mountainous regions. A treeless climatic realm
of sedges, grasses, mosses, and lichens that is dominated by a long, bitterly
cold winter.
Turbulence Any irregular or disturbed flow in the atmosphere
that produces gusts and eddies.
Twilight The time immediately before sunrise and after sunset
when the sky remain illuminated.
Typhoon A hurricane that forms in the western Pacific Ocean.
U
Ultraviolet radiation Electromagnetic radiation with wave-lengths longer
than X-rays but shorter than visible light.
Upslope fog Fog formed as moist, stable air flows upward over
a topographic barrier.
Upslope precipitation Precipitation that forms due to moist,
stable air gradually rising along an elevated plain. Upslope precipitation
is common over the western Great Plains, especially east of the Rock Mountains.
Upwelling The rising of water (usually cold) toward the surface
from the deeper regions of a body of water.
Urban heat island The increased air temperatures in urban
areas as contrasted to the cooler surrounding rural areas.
V
Valley breeze See Mountain breeze.
Valley fog See Radiation fog.
Vapor pressure The pressure exerted by the water vapor molecules
in a given volume of air.
Vernal equinox The equinox at which the sun approaches the
Northern Hemisphere and passes directly over the equator. Occurs around
March 20.
Virga Precipitation that falls from a cloud but evaporates
before reaching the ground. (See Fall streaks.)
Virtual temperature An adjustment applied to the real air
temperature to account for a reduction in air density due to the presence
of water vapor.
Viscosity The resistance of fluid flow.
Visibility The greatest distance an observer can see and identify
prominent objects.
Visible light That portion of the electromagnetic spectrum
from 0.4 to 0.7 µm wavelengths that is visible.
Vorticity A measure of the spin of a fluid, usually small
air parcels. Absolute vorticity is the combined vorticity due to the earth's
rotation and the vorticity due to the air's circulation relative to the
earth. Relative vorticity is due to the curving of the air flow and wind
shear.
W
Warm front The leading edge of a warm air mass.
Water balance The comparison of actual and potential evapotranspiration
with the amount of precipitation, usually on a monthly basis.
Water budget Balance sheet for the inputs and outputs of water
to and from the various global water reservoirs.
Water equivalent The depth of water that would result from
the melting of a snow sample. Typically about 10 inches of snow will melt
to 1 inch of water, producing a water equivalent of 10 to 1.
Weather The state of the atmosphere in terms of such variables
as temperature, cloudiness, precipitation, and radiation.
Weighing bucket rain gage A device that is calibrated so that
the weight of rainfall is recorded directly in terms of rainfall in millimeters
or in inches.
Wet-bulb depression The difference in degrees between the
air temperature (dry-bulb temperature) and the wet-bulb temperature.
Wet-bulb temperature The lowest temperature that can be obtained
by evaporating water into the air.
White frost Ice crystals that form on surfaces instead of
dew when the dew point is below freezing.
Wind chill equivalent temperature A theoretical air temperature
at which the heat loss from exposed skin under calm conditions is equivalent
to the heat loss at the actual air temperature and under the actual wind
speeds.
Wind-chill factor The cooling effect of any combination of
temperature and wind, expressed as the loss of body heat. Also called wind-chill
index.
Wind shear A difference in wind speed or direction between
two wind currents in the atmosphere.
Wind Vane An instrument used to determine wind direction.
Windsock A large, conical, open bag designed to indicate wind
direction and relative speed; usually used at small airports.
Winter solstice Approximately December 22 in the Northern
Hemisphere when the sun is lowest in the sky and directly overhead at latitude
23.5ºS, the Tropic of Capricorn.
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