buoyancy, lapse rate stability & convection. lecture 6. eps 5: 09 feb. 2010 1.review the concept...

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Buoyancy , Lapse Rate Stabilit y & Convecti on

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Z 2 Z 1 P 1 P 2 By how much is P1 > P2? The weight of the slab of fluid between Z1 and Z2 is given by the density, , multiplied by volume of the slab) and g weight of slab =  (area  height)  g. Set the area of the column to 1 m 2, the weight is  g  (Z2 -Z1): If the atmosphere is not being accelerated, there must be a difference in pressure (P2 - P1) across the slab that exactly balances the force of gravity (weight of the slab). Relationship between density, pressure and altitude

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Page 1: Buoyancy, Lapse Rate Stability & Convection. Lecture 6. EPS 5: 09 Feb. 2010 1.Review the concept of the barometric law (hydrostatic balance: each layer

Buoyancy,Lapse Rate

Stability &Convection

Page 2: Buoyancy, Lapse Rate Stability & Convection. Lecture 6. EPS 5: 09 Feb. 2010 1.Review the concept of the barometric law (hydrostatic balance: each layer

Lecture 6. EPS 5: 09 Feb. 2010

1. Review the concept of the barometric law (hydrostatic balance: each layer of atmosphere must support the weight of the overlying column mass of atmosphere). Discuss the distribution of pressure with altitude in the atmosphere, or depth in the ocean.

2. Introduce buoyancy. Pressure force "upwards" on an object immersed in a fluid.

3. Archimedes principle: the buoyancy force on an object is equal to the weight of the fluid displaced by the object. Role of gravity.

4. The buoyancy of warm air.

5. A brief look at global weather patterns—sea surface temperature and buoyancy.

6. Introducing the properties of water.

Page 3: Buoyancy, Lapse Rate Stability & Convection. Lecture 6. EPS 5: 09 Feb. 2010 1.Review the concept of the barometric law (hydrostatic balance: each layer

Z2

Z1 P

1

P2

By how much is P1 > P2? The weight of the slab of fluid between Z1 and Z2 is given by the density, ρ, multiplied by volume of the slab) and g

weight of slab = ρ(area height) g.

Set the area of the column to 1 m2, the weight isρ g (Z2 -Z1): If the atmosphere is not being accelerated, there must be a difference in pressure (P2 - P1) across the slab that exactly balances the force of gravity (weight of the slab).

Relationship between density, pressure and altitude

Page 4: Buoyancy, Lapse Rate Stability & Convection. Lecture 6. EPS 5: 09 Feb. 2010 1.Review the concept of the barometric law (hydrostatic balance: each layer

ocean atmosphere

1 bar = 105 N/m2

Page 5: Buoyancy, Lapse Rate Stability & Convection. Lecture 6. EPS 5: 09 Feb. 2010 1.Review the concept of the barometric law (hydrostatic balance: each layer

BuoyancyBuoyancy is the tendency for less dense fluids to be forced upwards by more dense fluids under the influence of gravity. Buoyancy arises when the pressure forces on an object are not perfectly balanced. Buoyancy is extremely significant as a driving force for motions in the atmosphere and oceans, and hence we will examine the concept very carefully here.

 

The mass density of air ρ is given by mn, where m is the mean mass of an air molecule (4.8110-26 kg molecule-1 for dry air), and n is the number density of air (n =2.69 1025 molecules m-3 at T=0o C, or 273.15 K). Therefore the density of dry air at 0 C is ρ = 1.29 kg m-3. If we raise the temperature to 10 C (283.15 K), the density is about 4% less, or 1.24 kg m-3. This seemingly small difference in density would cause air to move in the atmosphere, i.e. to cause winds.

Page 6: Buoyancy, Lapse Rate Stability & Convection. Lecture 6. EPS 5: 09 Feb. 2010 1.Review the concept of the barometric law (hydrostatic balance: each layer

Buoyancy force: Forces on a solid body immersed in a tank of water. The solid is assumed less dense than water and to have area A (e.g. 1m2 ) on all sides. P1 is the fluid pressure at level 1, and P1x is the downward pressure exerted by the weight of overlying atmosphere, plus fluid between the top of the tank and level 2, plus the object. The buoyancy force is P1 – P1x (up ↑) per unit area of the submerged block.

P1x

Net Force (Net pressure forces – Gravity)

Page 7: Buoyancy, Lapse Rate Stability & Convection. Lecture 6. EPS 5: 09 Feb. 2010 1.Review the concept of the barometric law (hydrostatic balance: each layer

The buoyancy force and Archimedes principle.1. Force on the top of the block: P2 A = ρwater D2 A g (A = area of top)

weight of the water in the volume above the block

2. Upward force on the bottom of the block = P1 A = ρwater D1 A g

3. Downward force on the bottom of the block = weight of the water in the volume above block + weight of block = ρwater D2 A g + ρblock (D1 - D2) A g

Unbalanced, Upward force on the block ( [2] – [3] ):

Fb = ρwater D1 A g – [ ρwater D2 A + ρblock (D1 - D2) A ] g

= ρwater g Vblock – ρblock g Vblock = (ρwater – ρblock) (D1 – D2) A g

weight of block

BUOYANCY FORCE = weight of the water (fluid) displaced by the block

Volume of the block = (D1 – D2) A

Page 8: Buoyancy, Lapse Rate Stability & Convection. Lecture 6. EPS 5: 09 Feb. 2010 1.Review the concept of the barometric law (hydrostatic balance: each layer

Archimedes principle: the buoyancy force on an object is equal to the weight of the fluid displaced by the object

•object immersed in a fluid

•weight of fluid displaced

•for the fluid itself, there will be a net upward force (buoyancy force exceeds object weight) on parcels less dense than the surrounding fluid, a net downward force on a parcel that is more dense.

•buoyancy can accelerate parcels in the vertical direction (unbalanced force).

•the derivation of the barometric law assumed that every air parcel experienced completely balanced forces, thus didn't accelerate. Buoyancy exactly balanced the weight of the parcel (“neutrally buoyant”) – this is approximately true even if the acceleration due to unbalanced forces is quite noticeable, because the total forces on an air parcel are really huge (100,000 N/m2), and thus only small imbalances are needed to produce significant accelerations.

Page 9: Buoyancy, Lapse Rate Stability & Convection. Lecture 6. EPS 5: 09 Feb. 2010 1.Review the concept of the barometric law (hydrostatic balance: each layer

Write down your answer. We will do this experiment in the next class, and invite a volunteer to explain the result using Archimedes principle.

Page 10: Buoyancy, Lapse Rate Stability & Convection. Lecture 6. EPS 5: 09 Feb. 2010 1.Review the concept of the barometric law (hydrostatic balance: each layer

A closer look at the U-tube experiment…

compute the density of the paint thinner :

Uh1

h2

h3

ρw h1 =ρw h3 + ρp h2

ρw (h1 – h3) = ρp h2

buoyancy force: ρwhi g – ρphi g = (ρw – ρp )hi g

Looks a lot like Archimedes' principle

2 hi = h1 + h2 + h3

Page 11: Buoyancy, Lapse Rate Stability & Convection. Lecture 6. EPS 5: 09 Feb. 2010 1.Review the concept of the barometric law (hydrostatic balance: each layer

Lecture 6. EPS 5

1. Review the concept of the barometric law (hydrostatic balance: each layer of atmosphere must support the weight of the overlying column mass of atmosphere). Discuss the distribution of pressure with altitude in the atmosphere, or depth in the ocean.

2. Introduce buoyancy. Pressure force "upwards" on an object immersed in a fluid.

3. Archimedes principle: the buoyancy force on an object is equal to the weight of the fluid displaced by the object. Role of gravity.

4. The buoyancy of warm air.

Page 12: Buoyancy, Lapse Rate Stability & Convection. Lecture 6. EPS 5: 09 Feb. 2010 1.Review the concept of the barometric law (hydrostatic balance: each layer

Cold, relatively dense air hashigher density than adjacent warmair, the warm air is buoyant (the coldair is "negatively buoyant"). The"warm air rises" (is buoyant!) .

Buoyancy and air temperature.

Consider two air parcels at the same pressure, but different temperatures.

P = ρ1 (k/m) T1 = ρ2 (k/m) T2

Then ρ1/ρ2 = T2/T1 ; if T1 > T2, ρ1 < ρ2 . Warmer air, lower density!

Page 13: Buoyancy, Lapse Rate Stability & Convection. Lecture 6. EPS 5: 09 Feb. 2010 1.Review the concept of the barometric law (hydrostatic balance: each layer

Lecture 6. EPS 5

1. Review the concept of the barometric law (hydrostatic balance: each layer of atmosphere must support the weight of the overlying column mass of atmosphere). Discuss the distribution of pressure with altitude in the atmosphere, or depth in the ocean.

2. Introduce buoyancy. Pressure force "upwards" on an object immersed in a fluid.

3. Archimedes principle: the buoyancy force on an object is equal to the weight of the fluid displaced by the object. Role of gravity.

4. The buoyancy of warm air.

5. Introduce properties of water vapor.

Page 14: Buoyancy, Lapse Rate Stability & Convection. Lecture 6. EPS 5: 09 Feb. 2010 1.Review the concept of the barometric law (hydrostatic balance: each layer

Lecture 6. EPS 5: 09 Feb. 2010

Review the concept of the barometric law (hydrostatic balance: each layer of atmosphere must support the weight of the overlying column mass of atmosphere). Discuss the distribution of pressure with altitude in the atmosphere, or depth in the ocean.

1. Introduce buoyancy. Pressure force "upwards" on an object immersed in a fluid.

2. Archimedes principle: the buoyancy force on an object is equal to the weight of the fluid displaced by the object. Role of gravity.

3. The buoyancy of warm air.

4. A brief look at global weather patterns—sea surface temperature and buoyancy.

5. Introducing the properties of water.

Page 15: Buoyancy, Lapse Rate Stability & Convection. Lecture 6. EPS 5: 09 Feb. 2010 1.Review the concept of the barometric law (hydrostatic balance: each layer

Global Sea Surface Temperatures February 2002

Page 16: Buoyancy, Lapse Rate Stability & Convection. Lecture 6. EPS 5: 09 Feb. 2010 1.Review the concept of the barometric law (hydrostatic balance: each layer

Global Sea Surface Temperature Anomalies, December 2001

Page 17: Buoyancy, Lapse Rate Stability & Convection. Lecture 6. EPS 5: 09 Feb. 2010 1.Review the concept of the barometric law (hydrostatic balance: each layer

10 Feb 2002

GOES ir image

Page 18: Buoyancy, Lapse Rate Stability & Convection. Lecture 6. EPS 5: 09 Feb. 2010 1.Review the concept of the barometric law (hydrostatic balance: each layer

10 Feb 2002

GOES ir image

Page 19: Buoyancy, Lapse Rate Stability & Convection. Lecture 6. EPS 5: 09 Feb. 2010 1.Review the concept of the barometric law (hydrostatic balance: each layer

http://www.cira.colostate.edu/Special/CurrWx/g8full40.asp

10 Feb 2003

GOES ir image

Page 20: Buoyancy, Lapse Rate Stability & Convection. Lecture 6. EPS 5: 09 Feb. 2010 1.Review the concept of the barometric law (hydrostatic balance: each layer

Global Sea Surface Temperature Anomalies, Dec. 2001, Jan 2003

12-2001

La Niña

01-2003

El Niño

Page 21: Buoyancy, Lapse Rate Stability & Convection. Lecture 6. EPS 5: 09 Feb. 2010 1.Review the concept of the barometric law (hydrostatic balance: each layer

Lecture 6. EPS 5: 09 Feb. 2010

Review the concept of the barometric law (hydrostatic balance: each layer of atmosphere must support the weight of the overlying column mass of atmosphere). Discuss the distribution of pressure with altitude in the atmosphere, or depth in the ocean.

1. Introduce buoyancy. Pressure force "upwards" on an object immersed in a fluid.

2. Archimedes principle: the buoyancy force on an object is equal to the weight of the fluid displaced by the object. Role of gravity.

3. The buoyancy of warm air.

4. A brief look at global weather patterns—sea surface temperature and buoyancy.

5. Introducing the properties of water.