essential question: why does sinking air cause areas of high pressure?

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Essential Question:

•Why does sinking air cause areas of high pressure?

Answer

•Sinking air causes areas of high pressure because sinking air presses down on the air beneath it.

Essential Question:

•What causes global wind?

Objective

• To understand the relationship between air pressure and the Coriolis effect in the formation of global wind patterns.

Key Concepts• About what percent of the

Earth’s atmosphere is O2?

• About what percent of the Earth’s atmosphere is nitrogen?

Key Concept•How does the greenhouse effect help regulate the Earth’s temperature?

Key Concepts• What early event caused the

Earth’s atmosphere to increase its amount of oxygen?

• How does air pressure change as altitude increases?

Key Concept• What are the three methods that

thermal energy is transferred through the atmosphere?

• Which method of thermal energy transfer is occurring when you place a pan on a stove?

• Which method of thermal energy transfer is occurring when the technician uses an X-ray?

• Which layer of the atmosphere do we live in?

• Which layer of the atmosphere contains the ozone layer

• Why does the stratosphere gain temperature as altitude increases?

• How are the layers of the formed?

• How is the boundaries between atmospheric layers determined?

• Pressure exerts forces in what direction?

• What holds the atmosphere in place around the Earth.

• What is the Coriolis Effect and how does it affect global winds?

• Why do global winds bend to the right in the Northern Hemisphere?

Agenda• Key Concept Review• Go over Quiz• Hurricane tracking• Power Point: Local Winds

• Video Local and Global Winds

Key terms:• Radiation: the transfer of energy

as electromagnetic waves• Thermal conduction: the

transfer of energy as heat through a material

• Convection: the transfer of thermal energy by the circulation or movement of a liquid or gas

Key Terms

•Wind: the movement of air caused by differences in air pressure.

•Coriolis effect: the apparent curving of the path of an object from a straight path due to the Earth’s rotation.

Essential Question:•What processes allow atmospheric gases to be constantly used and renewed?

Key Term:•Radiation balance: the

balance between incoming energy and outgoing energy within the atmosphere.

Content Objective:

•Differentiate between the layers of Earth’s atmosphere and identify the physical properties of each layer

Essential Question:•Why does temperature decrease as altitude increases in the troposphere, while temperature increases as altitude increases in the stratosphere?

Key TermsEasterlies: prevailing winds that blow from east to west between 60º and 90º latitude in both hemispheres.

Westerlies: prevailing winds that blow from west to east between 30º and 60º latitude in both hemispheres.

Trade winds: prevailing winds that blow from east to west from 30º latitude to the equator in both hemisphere

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