Meteorological phenomena
are observable weather events that are explained by the science of
meteorology. Meteorological phenomena are described and quantified by
the variables of Earth's atmosphere: temperature, air pressure, water vapour, mass flow, and the variations and interactions of those variables, and how they change over time. Different spatial scales are used to describe and predict weather on local, regional, and global levels.
Meteorology, climatology, atmospheric physics, and atmospheric chemistry are sub-disciplines of the atmospheric sciences. Meteorology and hydrology compose the interdisciplinary field of hydrometeorology. The interactions between Earth's atmosphere and its oceans are part of a coupled ocean-atmosphere system. Meteorology has application in many diverse fields such as the military, energy production, transport, agriculture, and construction.
The word meteorology is from the Ancient Greek μετέωρος metéōros (meteor) and -λογία -logia (-(o)logy), meaning "the study of things high in the air".
Meteorology, climatology, atmospheric physics, and atmospheric chemistry are sub-disciplines of the atmospheric sciences. Meteorology and hydrology compose the interdisciplinary field of hydrometeorology. The interactions between Earth's atmosphere and its oceans are part of a coupled ocean-atmosphere system. Meteorology has application in many diverse fields such as the military, energy production, transport, agriculture, and construction.
The word meteorology is from the Ancient Greek μετέωρος metéōros (meteor) and -λογία -logia (-(o)logy), meaning "the study of things high in the air".
History
The ability to predict rains and floods based on annual cycles was
evidently used by humans at least from the time of agricultural
settlement if not earlier. Early approaches to predicting weather were
based on astrology and were practiced by priests. Cuneiform inscriptions on Babylonian tablets included associations between thunder and rain. The Chaldeans differentiated the 22° and 46° halos.
Ancient Indian Upanishads contain mentions of clouds and seasons. The Samaveda mentions sacrifices to be performed when certain phenomena were noticed. Varāhamihira's classical work Brihatsamhita, written about 500 AD, provides evidence of weather observation.
In 350 BC, Aristotle wrote Meteorology. Aristotle is considered the founder of meteorology. One of the most impressive achievements described in the Meteorology is the description of what is now known as the hydrologic cycle.
The book De Mundo (composed before 250 BC or between 350 and 200 BC) noted
- If the flashing body is set on fire and rushes violently to the Earth it is called a thunderbolt; if it is only half of fire, but violent also and massive, it is called a meteor; if it is entirely free from fire, it is called a smoking bolt. They are all called 'swooping bolts' because they swoop down upon the Earth. Lightning is sometimes smoky, and is then called 'smoldering lightning"; sometimes it darts quickly along, and is then said to be vivid. At other times, it travels in crooked lines, and is called forked lightning. When it swoops down upon some object it is called 'swooping lightning'.
The Greek scientist Theophrastus compiled a book on weather forecasting, called the Book of Signs.
The work of Theophrastus remained a dominant influence in the study of
weather and in weather forecasting for nearly 2,000 years. In 25 AD, Pomponius Mela, a geographer for the Roman Empire, formalized the climatic zone system. According to Toufic Fahd, around the 9th century, Al-Dinawari wrote the Kitab al-Nabat (Book of Plants), in which he deals with the application of meteorology to agriculture during the Muslim Agricultural Revolution. He describes the meteorological character of the sky, the planets and constellations, the sun and moon, the lunar phases indicating seasons and rain, the anwa (heavenly bodies of rain), and atmospheric phenomena such as winds, thunder, lightning, snow, floods, valleys, rivers, lakes.
Early attempts at predicting weather were often related to
prophesy and divining and sometimes based on astrological ideas. Admiral
FitzRoy tried to separate scientific approaches from prophetic ones.
Research of visual atmospheric phenomena
Ptolemy wrote on the atmospheric refraction of light in the context of astronomical observations. In 1021, Alhazen showed that atmospheric refraction is also responsible for twilight; he estimated that twilight begins when the sun is 19 degrees below the horizon, and also used a geometric determination based on this to estimate the maximum possible height of the Earth's atmosphere as 52,000 passim (about 49 miles, or 79 km).
St. Albert the Great
was the first to propose that each drop of falling rain had the form of
a small sphere, and that this form meant that the rainbow was produced
by light interacting with each raindrop. Roger Bacon
was the first to calculate the angular size of the rainbow. He stated
that a rainbow summit can not appear higher than 42 degrees above the
horizon. In the late 13th century and early 14th century, Kamāl al-Dīn al-Fārisī and Theodoric of Freiberg were the first to give the correct explanations for the primary rainbow phenomenon. Theoderic went further and also explained the secondary rainbow. In 1716, Edmund Halley suggested that aurorae are caused by "magnetic effluvia" moving along the Earth's magnetic field lines.
Instruments and classification scales
In 1441, King Sejong's son, Prince Munjong of Korea, invented the first standardized rain gauge. These were sent throughout the Joseon Dynasty of Korea as an official tool to assess land taxes based upon a farmer's potential harvest. In 1450, Leone Battista Alberti developed a swinging-plate anemometer, and was known as the first anemometer. In 1607, Galileo Galilei constructed a thermoscope. In 1611, Johannes Kepler wrote the first scientific treatise on snow crystals: "Strena Seu de Nive Sexangula (A New Year's Gift of Hexagonal Snow)". In 1643, Evangelista Torricelli invented the mercury barometer. In 1662, Sir Christopher Wren invented the mechanical, self-emptying, tipping bucket rain gauge. In 1714, Gabriel Fahrenheit created a reliable scale for measuring temperature with a mercury-type thermometer. In 1742, Anders Celsius, a Swedish astronomer, proposed the "centigrade" temperature scale, the predecessor of the current Celsius scale. In 1783, the first hair hygrometer was demonstrated by Horace-Bénédict de Saussure. In 1802–1803, Luke Howard wrote On the Modification of Clouds, in which he assigns cloud types Latin names. In 1806, Francis Beaufort introduced his system for classifying wind speeds. Near the end of the 19th century the first cloud atlases were published, including the International Cloud Atlas, which has remained in print ever since. The April 1960 launch of the first successful weather satellite, TIROS-1, marked the beginning of the age where weather information became available globally.
Atmospheric composition research
In 1648, Blaise Pascal rediscovered that atmospheric pressure decreases with height, and deduced that there is a vacuum above the atmosphere. In 1738, Daniel Bernoulli published Hydrodynamics, initiating the Kinetic theory of gases and established the basic laws for the theory of gases. In 1761, Joseph Black discovered that ice absorbs heat without changing its temperature when melting. In 1772, Black's student Daniel Rutherford discovered nitrogen, which he called phlogisticated air, and together they developed the phlogiston theory. In 1777, Antoine Lavoisier discovered oxygen and developed an explanation for combustion. In 1783, in Lavoisier's essay "Reflexions sur le phlogistique", he deprecates the phlogiston theory and proposes a caloric theory. In 1804, Sir John Leslie observed that a matte black surface radiates heat more effectively than a polished surface, suggesting the importance of black body radiation. In 1808, John Dalton defended caloric theory in A New System of Chemistry and described how it combines with matter, especially gases; he proposed that the heat capacity of gases varies inversely with atomic weight. In 1824, Sadi Carnot analyzed the efficiency of steam engines using caloric theory; he developed the notion of a reversible process and, in postulating that no such thing exists in nature, laid the foundation for the second law of thermodynamics.
Research into cyclones and air flow
In 1494, Christopher Columbus experienced a tropical cyclone, which led to the first written European account of a hurricane. In 1686, Edmund Halley presented a systematic study of the trade winds and monsoons and identified solar heating as the cause of atmospheric motions. In 1735, an ideal explanation of global circulation through study of the trade winds was written by George Hadley. In 1743, when Benjamin Franklin was prevented from seeing a lunar eclipse by a hurricane, he decided that cyclones move in a contrary manner to the winds at their periphery.
Understanding the kinematics of how exactly the rotation of the Earth
affects airflow was partial at first. Gaspard-Gustave Coriolis published
a paper in 1835 on the energy yield of machines with rotating parts,
such as waterwheels. In 1856, William Ferrel proposed the existence of a circulation cell in the mid-latitudes, and the air within deflected by the Coriolis force resulting in the prevailing westerly winds. Late in the 19th century, the motion of air masses along isobars was understood to be the result of the large-scale interaction of the pressure gradient force and the deflecting force. By 1912, this deflecting force was named the Coriolis effect. Just after World War I, a group of meteorologists in Norway led by Vilhelm Bjerknes developed the Norwegian cyclone model that explains the generation, intensification and ultimate decay (the life cycle) of mid-latitude cyclones, and introduced the idea of fronts, that is, sharply defined boundaries between air masses. The group included Carl-Gustaf Rossby (who was the first to explain the large scale atmospheric flow in terms of fluid dynamics), Tor Bergeron (who first determined how rain forms) and Jacob Bjerknes.
Observation networks and weather forecasting
In the late 16th century and first half of the 17th century a range of meteorological instruments was invented – the thermometer, barometer, hydrometer,
as well as wind and rain gauges. In the 1650s natural philosophers
started using these instruments to systematically record weather
observations. Scientific academies established weather diaries and
organised observational networks. In 1654, Ferdinando II de Medici established the first weather observing network, that consisted of meteorological stations in Florence, Cutigliano, Vallombrosa, Bologna, Parma, Milan, Innsbruck, Osnabrück, Paris and Warsaw. The collected data were sent to Florence at regular time intervals. In the 1660s Robert Hooke of the Royal Society of London sponsored networks of weather observers. Hippocrates' treatise Airs, Waters, and Places
had linked weather to disease. Thus early meteorologists attempted to
correlate weather patterns with epidemic outbreaks, and the climate with
public health.
During the Age of Enlightenment
meteorology tried to rationalise traditional weather lore, including
astrological meteorology. But there were also attempts to establish a
theoretical understanding of weather phenomena. Edmond Halley and George Hadley tried to explain trade winds.
They reasoned that the rising mass of heated equator air is replaced by
an inflow of cooler air from high latitudes. A flow of warm air at high
altitude from equator to poles in turn established an early picture of
circulation. Frustration with the lack of discipline among weather
observers, and the poor quality of the instruments, led the early modern
nation states
to organise large observation networks. Thus by the end of the 18th
century meteorologists had access to large quantities of reliable
weather data. In 1832, an electromagnetic telegraph was created by Baron Schilling. The arrival of the electrical telegraph in 1837 afforded, for the first time, a practical method for quickly gathering surface weather observations from a wide area.
This data could be used to produce maps of the state of the
atmosphere for a region near the Earth's surface and to study how these
states evolved through time. To make frequent weather forecasts based on
these data required a reliable network of observations, but it was not
until 1849 that the Smithsonian Institution began to establish an observation network across the United States under the leadership of Joseph Henry. Similar observation networks were established in Europe at this time. The Reverend William Clement Ley was key in understanding of cirrus clouds and early understandings of Jet Streams. Charles Kenneth Mackinnon Douglas, known as 'CKM' Douglas read Ley's papers after his death and carried on the early study of weather systems.
Nineteenth century researchers in meteorology were drawn from military
or medical backgrounds, rather than trained as dedicated scientists. In 1854, the United Kingdom government appointed Robert FitzRoy to the new office of Meteorological Statist to the Board of Trade with the task of gathering weather observations at sea. FitzRoy's office became the United Kingdom Meteorological Office in 1854, the second oldest national meteorological service in the world (the Central Institution for Meteorology and Geodynamics
(ZAMG) in Austria was founded in 1851 and is the oldest weather service
in the world). The first daily weather forecasts made by FitzRoy's
Office were published in The Times
newspaper in 1860. The following year a system was introduced of
hoisting storm warning cones at principal ports when a gale was
expected.
Over the next 50 years many countries established national meteorological services. The India Meteorological Department (1875) was established to follow tropical cyclone and monsoon. The Finnish Meteorological Central Office (1881) was formed from part of Magnetic Observatory of Helsinki University. Japan's Tokyo Meteorological Observatory, the forerunner of the Japan Meteorological Agency, began constructing surface weather maps in 1883. The United States Weather Bureau (1890) was established under the United States Department of Agriculture. The Australian Bureau of Meteorology (1906) was established by a Meteorology Act to unify existing state meteorological services.
Numerical weather prediction
In 1904, Norwegian scientist Vilhelm Bjerknes first argued in his paper Weather Forecasting as a Problem in Mechanics and Physics that it should be possible to forecast weather from calculations based upon natural laws.
It was not until later in the 20th century that advances in the
understanding of atmospheric physics led to the foundation of modern numerical weather prediction. In 1922, Lewis Fry Richardson published "Weather Prediction By Numerical Process",
after finding notes and derivations he worked on as an ambulance driver
in World War I. He described how small terms in the prognostic fluid
dynamics equations that govern atmospheric flow could be neglected, and a
numerical calculation scheme that could be devised to allow
predictions. Richardson envisioned a large auditorium of thousands of
people performing the calculations. However, the sheer number of
calculations required was too large to complete without electronic
computers, and the size of the grid and time steps used in the
calculations led to unrealistic results. Though numerical analysis later
found that this was due to numerical instability.
Starting in the 1950s, numerical forecasts with computers became feasible. The first weather forecasts derived this way used barotropic (single-vertical-level) models, and could successfully predict the large-scale movement of midlatitude Rossby waves, that is, the pattern of atmospheric lows and highs. In 1959, the UK Meteorological Office received its first computer, a Ferranti Mercury.
In the 1960s, the chaotic nature of the atmosphere was first observed and mathematically described by Edward Lorenz, founding the field of chaos theory. These advances have led to the current use of ensemble forecasting in most major forecasting centers, to take into account uncertainty arising from the chaotic nature of the atmosphere. Mathematical models used to predict the long term weather of the Earth,
have been developed that have a resolution today that are as coarse as
the older weather prediction models. These climate models are used to
investigate long-term climate shifts, such as what effects might be caused by human emission of greenhouse gases.
Meteorologists
Meteorologists are scientists who study meteorology. The American Meteorological Society published and continually updates an authoritative electronic Meteorology Glossary. Meteorologists work in government agencies, private consulting and research services, industrial enterprises, utilities, radio and television stations, and in education. In the United States, meteorologists held about 9,400 jobs in 2009.
Meteorologists are best known by the public for weather forecasting. Some radio and television weather forecasters are professional meteorologists, while others are reporters (weather specialist, weatherman, etc.) with no formal meteorological training. The American Meteorological Society and National Weather Association issue "Seals of Approval" to weather broadcasters who meet certain requirements.
Equipment
Each science has its own unique sets of laboratory equipment. In the
atmosphere, there are many things or qualities of the atmosphere that
can be measured. Rain, which can be observed, or seen anywhere and
anytime was one of the first atmospheric qualities measured
historically. Also, two other accurately measured qualities are wind and
humidity. Neither of these can be seen but can be felt. The devices to
measure these three sprang up in the mid-15th century and were
respectively the rain gauge,
the anemometer, and the hygrometer. Many attempts had been made prior
to the 15th century to construct adequate equipment to measure the many
atmospheric variables. Many were faulty in some way or were simply not
reliable. Even Aristotle noted this in some of his work as the difficulty to measure the air.
Sets of surface measurements are important data to
meteorologists. They give a snapshot of a variety of weather conditions
at one single location and are usually at a weather station, a ship or a weather buoy. The measurements taken at a weather station can include any number of atmospheric observables. Usually, temperature, pressure, wind measurements, and humidity are the variables that are measured by a thermometer, barometer, anemometer, and hygrometer, respectively. Professional stations may also include air quality sensors (carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, methane, ozone, dust, and smoke), ceilometer (cloud ceiling), falling precipitation sensor, flood sensor, lightning sensor, microphone (explosions, sonic booms, thunder), pyranometer/pyrheliometer/spectroradiometer (IR/Vis/UV photodiodes), rain gauge/snow gauge, scintillation counter (background radiation, fallout, radon), seismometer (earthquakes and tremors), transmissometer (visibility), and a GPS clock for data logging. Upper air data are of crucial importance for weather forecasting. The most widely used technique is launches of radiosondes. Supplementing the radiosondes a network of aircraft collection is organized by the World Meteorological Organization.
Remote sensing,
as used in meteorology, is the concept of collecting data from remote
weather events and subsequently producing weather information. The
common types of remote sensing are Radar, Lidar, and satellites (or photogrammetry).
Each collects data about the atmosphere from a remote location and,
usually, stores the data where the instrument is located. Radar and
Lidar are not passive because both use EM radiation to illuminate a specific portion of the atmosphere.
Weather satellites along with more general-purpose Earth-observing
satellites circling the earth at various altitudes have become an
indispensable tool for studying a wide range of phenomena from forest
fires to El Niño.
Spatial scales
The
study of the atmosphere can be divided into distinct areas that depend
on both time and spatial scales. At one extreme of this scale is
climatology. In the timescales of hours to days, meteorology separates
into micro-, meso-, and synoptic scale meteorology. Respectively, the geospatial size of each of these three scales relates directly with the appropriate timescale.
Other subclassifications are used to describe the unique, local, or broad effects within those subclasses.
Type of motion | Horizontal scale (meter) |
---|---|
Molecular mean free path | 10−7 |
Minute turbulent eddies | 10−2 – 10−1 |
Small eddies | 10−1 – 1 |
Dust devils | 1–10 |
Gusts | 10 – 102 |
Tornadoes | 102 |
Thunderclouds | 103 |
Fronts, squall lines | 104 – 105 |
Hurricanes | 105 |
Synoptic Cyclones | 106 |
Planetary waves | 107 |
Atmospheric tides | 107 |
Mean zonal wind | 107 |
Microscale
Microscale meteorology is the study of atmospheric phenomena on a
scale of about 1 kilometre (0.62 mi) or less. Individual thunderstorms,
clouds, and local turbulence caused by buildings and other obstacles
(such as individual hills) are modeled on this scale.
Mesoscale
Mesoscale meteorology is the study of atmospheric phenomena that has
horizontal scales ranging from 1 km to 1000 km and a vertical scale that
starts at the Earth's surface and includes the atmospheric boundary
layer, troposphere, tropopause, and the lower section of the stratosphere. Mesoscale timescales last from less than a day to weeks. The events typically of interest are thunderstorms, squall lines, fronts, precipitation bands in tropical and extratropical cyclones, and topographically generated weather systems such as mountain waves and sea and land breezes.
Synoptic scale
Synoptic scale meteorology predicts atmospheric changes at scales up to 1000 km and 105 sec (28 days), in time and space. At the synoptic scale, the Coriolis acceleration
acting on moving air masses (outside of the tropics) plays a dominant
role in predictions. The phenomena typically described by synoptic meteorology include events such as extratropical cyclones, baroclinic troughs and ridges, frontal zones, and to some extent jet streams. All of these are typically given on weather maps for a specific time. The minimum horizontal scale of synoptic phenomena is limited to the spacing between surface observation stations.
Global scale
Global scale meteorology is the study of weather patterns related to the transport of heat from the tropics to the poles.
Very large scale oscillations are of importance at this scale. These
oscillations have time periods typically on the order of months, such as
the Madden–Julian oscillation, or years, such as the El Niño–Southern Oscillation and the Pacific decadal oscillation.
Global scale meteorology pushes into the range of climatology. The
traditional definition of climate is pushed into larger timescales and
with the understanding of the longer time scale global oscillations,
their effect on climate and weather disturbances can be included in the
synoptic and mesoscale timescales predictions.
Numerical Weather Prediction is a main focus in understanding
air–sea interaction, tropical meteorology, atmospheric predictability,
and tropospheric/stratospheric processes. The Naval Research Laboratory in Monterey, California, developed a global atmospheric model called Navy Operational Global Atmospheric Prediction System (NOGAPS). NOGAPS is run operationally at Fleet Numerical Meteorology and Oceanography Center for the United States Military. Many other global atmospheric models are run by national meteorological agencies.
Some meteorological principles
Boundary layer meteorology
Boundary layer meteorology is the study of processes in the air layer directly above Earth's surface, known as the atmospheric boundary layer (ABL). The effects of the surface – heating, cooling, and friction – cause turbulent mixing within the air layer. Significant movement of heat, matter, or momentum on time scales of less than a day are caused by turbulent motions.
Boundary layer meteorology includes the study of all types of
surface–atmosphere boundary, including ocean, lake, urban land and
non-urban land for the study of meteorology.
Dynamic meteorology
Dynamic meteorology generally focuses on the fluid dynamics of the atmosphere. The idea of air parcel
is used to define the smallest element of the atmosphere, while
ignoring the discrete molecular and chemical nature of the atmosphere.
An air parcel is defined as a point in the fluid continuum of the
atmosphere. The fundamental laws of fluid dynamics, thermodynamics, and
motion are used to study the atmosphere. The physical quantities that
characterize the state of the atmosphere are temperature, density,
pressure, etc. These variables have unique values in the continuum.
Applications
Weather forecasting
Weather forecasting is the application of science and technology to predict the state of the atmosphere
at a future time and given location. Humans have attempted to predict
the weather informally for millennia and formally since at least the
19th century. Weather forecasts are made by collecting quantitative data
about the current state of the atmosphere and using scientific
understanding of atmospheric processes to project how the atmosphere
will evolve.
Once an all-human endeavor based mainly upon changes in barometric pressure, current weather conditions, and sky condition, forecast models
are now used to determine future conditions. Human input is still
required to pick the best possible forecast model to base the forecast
upon, which involves pattern recognition skills, teleconnections, knowledge of model performance, and knowledge of model biases. The chaotic
nature of the atmosphere, the massive computational power required to
solve the equations that describe the atmosphere, error involved in
measuring the initial conditions, and an incomplete understanding of
atmospheric processes mean that forecasts become less accurate as the
difference in current time and the time for which the forecast is being
made (the range of the forecast) increases. The use of ensembles and model consensus help narrow the error and pick the most likely outcome.
There are a variety of end uses to weather forecasts. Weather
warnings are important forecasts because they are used to protect life
and property. Forecasts based on temperature and precipitation are important to agriculture,
and therefore to commodity traders within stock markets. Temperature
forecasts are used by utility companies to estimate demand over coming
days.
On an everyday basis, people use weather forecasts to determine what to
wear. Since outdoor activities are severely curtailed by heavy rain,
snow, and wind chill, forecasts can be used to plan activities around these events, and to plan ahead and survive them.
Aviation meteorology
Aviation meteorology deals with the impact of weather on air traffic management.
It is important for air crews to understand the implications of weather
on their flight plan as well as their aircraft, as noted by the Aeronautical Information Manual:
The effects of ice on aircraft are cumulative—thrust is reduced, drag increases, lift lessens, and weight increases. The results are an increase in stall speed and a deterioration of aircraft performance. In extreme cases, 2 to 3 inches of ice can form on the leading edge of the airfoil in less than 5 minutes. It takes but 1/2 inch of ice to reduce the lifting power of some aircraft by 50 percent and increases the frictional drag by an equal percentage.
Agricultural meteorology
Meteorologists, soil scientists, agricultural hydrologists, and agronomists are people concerned with studying the effects of weather and climate on plant distribution, crop yield, water-use efficiency, phenology
of plant and animal development, and the energy balance of managed and
natural ecosystems. Conversely, they are interested in the role of
vegetation on climate and weather.
Hydrometeorology
Hydrometeorology is the branch of meteorology that deals with the hydrologic cycle, the water budget, and the rainfall statistics of storms.
A hydrometeorologist prepares and issues forecasts of accumulating
(quantitative) precipitation, heavy rain, heavy snow, and highlights
areas with the potential for flash flooding. Typically the range of
knowledge that is required overlaps with climatology, mesoscale and
synoptic meteorology, and other geosciences.
The multidisciplinary nature of the branch can result in
technical challenges, since tools and solutions from each of the
individual disciplines involved may behave slightly differently, be
optimized for different hard- and software platforms and use different
data formats. There are some initiatives – such as the DRIHM project – that are trying to address this issue.
Nuclear meteorology
Nuclear meteorology investigates the distribution of radioactive aerosols and gases in the atmosphere.
Maritime meteorology
Maritime meteorology deals with air and wave forecasts for ships operating at sea. Organizations such as the Ocean Prediction Center, Honolulu National Weather Service forecast office, United Kingdom Met Office, and JMA prepare high seas forecasts for the world's oceans.
Military meteorology
Military meteorology is the research and application of meteorology for military purposes. In the United States, the United States Navy's Commander, Naval Meteorology and Oceanography Command oversees meteorological efforts for the Navy and Marine Corps while the United States Air Force's Air Force Weather Agency is responsible for the Air Force and Army.
Environmental meteorology
Environmental
meteorology mainly analyzes industrial pollution dispersion physically
and chemically based on meteorological parameters such as temperature,
humidity, wind, and various weather conditions.