PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY- MIDTERM STUDY GUIDE

Be able to define and give an example for the following:

Geographic Grid

Shape of Earth – Ellipsoid/oblate spheroid

Great Circle/Small CircleMeridians/LongitudeParallels/Latitude

Tropic of CancerTropic of Capricorn

Arctic CircleAntarctic Circle

Earth’s Rotation and Revolution: diurnal, annual – shape of orbit, direction of orbit, number of days in year

Tilt of Earth’s axis and relation to Seasons

Maps and Projections

Define a Map

Map Essentials

Scale: Verbal, Graphic/Bar, Representative Fraction

Small scale vs. large-scale maps

Define ‘Map Projections’

Map Projection Problems: Area, Shape, Distance, Direction

Map Projection Types: describe types, give examples, advantages and disadvantages of each – which are equal shape, which are equal area, which are neither equal shape nor equal area

Planar Projection – Gnomonic projection; Polar projection

Purpose and benefit

Cylindrical Projection – Mercator projection

Purpose and benefit

Conic Projection – Albers Equal Area Conic projection

Purpose and benefit

Atmosphere

Origin

Chemical Composition and percentages of gases

Greenhouse Gases: CH4, CO2, N2O, CFCs, O3, H2Ov: Sources, problems, solutions – Can you explain, define and identify a greenhouse gas?

Atmospheric Pressure: sea level measures (metric and English)

Layers of Atmosphere: Individual layers and boundaries, elevations, types of activities within each layer, lapse rates, temperature differences, which layer produces atmospheric ozone, which layer produces all weather

Energy Balance

Incoming solar radiation balanced against outgoing Earth radiation

Global warming concerns

Albedo

Temperature, Heat and Energy

Kinetic Energy and Potential Energy: Internal Energy (PE = KE)

1st Law of Thermodynamics – Conservation of Energy Law

Define, explain, and give examples the following terms:

TemperatureSpecific Heat

HeatLatent Heat

Heat capacityEvaporation

CondensationSublimation

Specific Heat: Relation of specific heat of water to other substances – What effect does water’s high specific heat have on coastal locations?

Latent Heat (hidden heat): Relation to evaporation, condensation, sublimation processes in atmosphere – how does latent heat relate to storms and cloud building in the atmosphere

Heat Transportation Processes in Atmosphere – where does each operate in the atmosphere, which is most effective at transporting energy, how does each transport energy

(1) Conduction: molecule-to-molecule transfer of energy

(2) Convection: transfer of energy through currents in a fluid (liquid/air)

(3)Radiation: energy traveling in waves that release energy upon contact

Electromagnetic Spectrum – shortwave, high energy: longwave, Low energy

Lambda (length of wave from crest to crest)

Seasonal and Daily Temperature Measurements

Daily lag time: Day and night temperatures

Coldest time of day AND Warmest time of day Seasonal lag time

Daily/Diurnal Range of Temperature: Greatest range/lowest range occurrences

Mean daily temperatureMean annual temperature

Annual range of temperatures: Greatest range/lowest range occurrences

Temperature Controls:LatitudeLand (continental) vs. Water (maritime) locationOcean CurrentsElevation Albedo How do each of these ‘work’ to control temperature?

Atmospheric Pressure

What is atmospheric pressure? What are typical measurements of air pressure? How is air pressure measured? What are typical values for sea level air pressure?

Pressure Charts: Constant Surface Chartvs. Constant Pressure Chart

Can you diagram Northern and Southern Hemisphere air flow around Highs and Lows? What is cyclonic and anticyclonic air flow? How does airflow around Highs and Lows vary from Northern to Southern Hemisphere?

Global Circulation:

Thermal and Dynamic Highs/Lows: Developmental differences

Anticyclonic flowCyclonic Flow

Location: Northeast /Southeast TradesWesterliesPolar Easterlies

How developed? Location of belts of Low Pressure? High pressure around the globe?

Forces affecting Wind movement

Pressure Gradient Force

Coriolis Force

Friction

Geostrophic Wind Development: How does this wind develop? What’s the relationship of PGF and CF and this wind?

What are theSemi-permanent Highs and Lows in Atlantic Ocean and Pacific Ocean? Location and types

El Nino-Southern Oscillation

Interrelationships – development – conditions – consequences - research

Pacific Ocean Currents – name and identify warm/cold

Atlantic Ocean Currents –name and identify warm/cold

Jet Streams: What are they? What is their effect on developing surface Highs and Lows? Where are they forming?

Local, regional & global-scale winds: Can you define, explain and diagram the following winds?

Sea Breeze/Land breezeMonsoons Santa Ana Winds

Humidity

What is the hydrologic cycle?

Absolute HumiditySpecific Humidity Relative Humidity Dew Point Temperature

What is vapor pressure? Actual vapor pressure (AVP)? Saturated vapor Pressure (SVP)? What is a Rainshadow desert – what is it relationship to lapse rates?

Lapse Rates - Normal - Inverse – Isothermal

Dry Adiabatic Lapse Rate –

Wet Adiabatic Lapse Rate

Environmental Lapse Rate

Stability:

Stable AirUnstable AirConditionally Unstable Air Convective Instability

Give examples - (Diagrams of stability) Relationship between stability and DALR,

WALR and ELR?

Cloud development:

Four Mechanisms for upliftCondensation nuclei – Types and locations

Cloud droplet to Rain droplet...mechanisms involved

(collision/coalescence, cloud thickness, electrical charge, liquid water content, uplift/updrafts)

Four major classes of clouds

Types of clouds within each class

Clouds with vertical development

Relationship between cloud development and stability

Precipitation: types: Rain (Virga), Snow, Hail, Freezing Rain, Sleet

Vertical temperature profiles for each precipitation type, define characteristics and formation for each type

Air Masses and Fronts

cT, cP, mP, mT, cA, eT (mE) – give descriptions and source regions

Identify characteristics of source regions

Fronts: Cold front, warm front, stationary front, occluded front: identify each and give weather for each

(including cloud formation, precipitation) – Can you identify a cold front, a warm front, a stationary front and an occluded front on a weather map?

Mid-latitude cyclones: identify, describe characteristics and formation, and relationship to storms in

Northern hemisphere

Thunderstorms, Tornadoes and Hurricanes

Air mass vs. Severe: describe differences and similarities, including formation processes for each,

lifecycles: Cumulus Stage (event), Mature Stage, Dissipating Stage

Characteristics of Severe: microburst, wind shear, hail, thunder, lightning, roll cloud, gust fronts, updrafts

downdrafts, mammatus clouds, Can you explain, define and identify a severe thunderstorms lifecycle and all the characteristics?

Tornadoes: development, mesocyclone, vortex, mammatus clouds, overshooting top, wall cloud, funnel cloud

Location in USA: “Tornado Alley”

Air masses and atmospheric conditions involved in forming T-Storms to spawn tornadoes

Hurricanes: description of characteristics, formation processes, dissipation processes,global location,

Atmospheric conditions necessary, development/stages

Internal structure of a hurricane: eye, eye wall clouds, storm surge, air pressure changes, wind

Speeds, wind direction

Movement across oceans- speed, direction, ‘guiding’ forces (winds, for example)

Major differences between hurricanes and mid-latitude cyclones: identify and describe each difference

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Midterm Study guide

Winter 2008