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SCIENCE 10 Wind and Ocean Currents

SCIENCE 10 Wind and Ocean Currents. A Little Background … Atmospheric Pressure is the pressure the air exerts as gravity pulls it towards the earth’s

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Page 1: SCIENCE 10 Wind and Ocean Currents. A Little Background … Atmospheric Pressure is the pressure the air exerts as gravity pulls it towards the earth’s

SCIENCE 10

Wind and Ocean Currents

Page 2: SCIENCE 10 Wind and Ocean Currents. A Little Background … Atmospheric Pressure is the pressure the air exerts as gravity pulls it towards the earth’s

A Little Background …

Atmospheric Pressure is the pressure the air exerts as gravity pulls it towards the earth’s surface. Atmospheric pressure is measured using a

barometer. Since air molecules are so spread out (lots of

empty space), we don’t feel the pressure that they exert.

Differences in air pressure help cause winds and affect air masses. They are also factors in the formation of storms such as thunderstorms, tornadoes and hurricanes.

Page 3: SCIENCE 10 Wind and Ocean Currents. A Little Background … Atmospheric Pressure is the pressure the air exerts as gravity pulls it towards the earth’s

Neat Fact

The weight of the air that is pushing down on your shoulders at any given time is equivalent to 1 ton, or about the weight of a fully grown rhino.

Page 4: SCIENCE 10 Wind and Ocean Currents. A Little Background … Atmospheric Pressure is the pressure the air exerts as gravity pulls it towards the earth’s

What is Wind?

Wind is a movement of air in the atmosphere.

How Wind DevelopsWind is caused by a difference in air pressure due to unequal

heating of the atmosphere.

Question: Where on the planet does the surface get heated more than other areas?...

At the Earth’s surface, wind always blows from areas of high pressure to areas of low pressure.

Page 5: SCIENCE 10 Wind and Ocean Currents. A Little Background … Atmospheric Pressure is the pressure the air exerts as gravity pulls it towards the earth’s

How are Winds Created?

Winds are created by….1. Heating the air, decreases pressure (warm air rises creating a low

pressure)↓

2. Cool air rushes into replace the warm air (cooler dense air, produces high pressure)

↓ 3. As air goes from high to low pressure winds form.

This is a CONVECTION style… Convection Current Demo Time!!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7xWWowXtuvA

Page 6: SCIENCE 10 Wind and Ocean Currents. A Little Background … Atmospheric Pressure is the pressure the air exerts as gravity pulls it towards the earth’s

Classifying Winds

Localized winds are winds affect only small areas.

Types of Local Winds Sea Breezes- from sea to land Land Breezes- from land to sea

Prevailing winds are winds that affect large areas.- They affect weather around the globe.

Page 7: SCIENCE 10 Wind and Ocean Currents. A Little Background … Atmospheric Pressure is the pressure the air exerts as gravity pulls it towards the earth’s

Causes of Prevailing Winds

Prevailing Winds are caused by a combination of convection currents and the Earth’s eastward rotation.

Air at the equator is warmed and rises, forming a convection current called the equatorial convection current. This wind moves northward and begins to cool.

Page 8: SCIENCE 10 Wind and Ocean Currents. A Little Background … Atmospheric Pressure is the pressure the air exerts as gravity pulls it towards the earth’s
Page 9: SCIENCE 10 Wind and Ocean Currents. A Little Background … Atmospheric Pressure is the pressure the air exerts as gravity pulls it towards the earth’s

The Coriolis Effect

Earth’s rotation causes anything that moves LONG DISTANCES, such as prevailing winds, to APPEAR to change directions.

The apparent change in direction of a moving object in a rotating system is called the CORIOLIS EFFECT.

videoVideo2

Page 10: SCIENCE 10 Wind and Ocean Currents. A Little Background … Atmospheric Pressure is the pressure the air exerts as gravity pulls it towards the earth’s

Coriolis cont…

This is evident on the Earth because as Earth rotates eastward, an object travelling from north to south will appear to move to the right.

In the southern hemisphere objects moving from the pole appear to move to the left.

The Coriolis effect is more predominant closer to the poles.

Page 11: SCIENCE 10 Wind and Ocean Currents. A Little Background … Atmospheric Pressure is the pressure the air exerts as gravity pulls it towards the earth’s
Page 12: SCIENCE 10 Wind and Ocean Currents. A Little Background … Atmospheric Pressure is the pressure the air exerts as gravity pulls it towards the earth’s
Page 13: SCIENCE 10 Wind and Ocean Currents. A Little Background … Atmospheric Pressure is the pressure the air exerts as gravity pulls it towards the earth’s

Prevailing Wind Terms:

Polar easterlies – occur between 60 degrees latitude and the poles and moves east to west.

Mid-latitude westerlies – occurs between 30 degrees and 60 degrees latitude and move from west to east

Northeast trade winds – occur just north of the equator and move east to west.

Southeast trade winds – occur just south of the equator and move east to west.

Page 14: SCIENCE 10 Wind and Ocean Currents. A Little Background … Atmospheric Pressure is the pressure the air exerts as gravity pulls it towards the earth’s

Effects of Prevailing Winds

Help distribute large amounts of solar energy from the equator to the colder parts of the world.

Prevailing winds also carry moisture, causing a variety of precipitation (snow, rain, etc…)

Page 15: SCIENCE 10 Wind and Ocean Currents. A Little Background … Atmospheric Pressure is the pressure the air exerts as gravity pulls it towards the earth’s

Wind terms cont…

Gusts – occur because of a rapid air pressure change and move in no fixed direction

Squalls – gusts accompanied by rainWind speed indicator –

anemometeranemometer/weather vane

Page 16: SCIENCE 10 Wind and Ocean Currents. A Little Background … Atmospheric Pressure is the pressure the air exerts as gravity pulls it towards the earth’s

Class Work

• Read pages 516 to 519 to review winds. Pay close attention to the Figures 1 and 2 on page 516 and 517.

• Complete questions: 1 and 2 on page 519 to reinforce what you have

learned about wind.

Page 17: SCIENCE 10 Wind and Ocean Currents. A Little Background … Atmospheric Pressure is the pressure the air exerts as gravity pulls it towards the earth’s

Ocean Currents

Page 18: SCIENCE 10 Wind and Ocean Currents. A Little Background … Atmospheric Pressure is the pressure the air exerts as gravity pulls it towards the earth’s

Ocean Currents

Ocean Currents are a mass movement or flow of ocean water.

Currents are like a river within the ocean.The reason Norway and Iceland have mild

winters is due to ocean currents. Two types

SurfaceSurface and DeepDeep

Page 19: SCIENCE 10 Wind and Ocean Currents. A Little Background … Atmospheric Pressure is the pressure the air exerts as gravity pulls it towards the earth’s

Surface Current

Surface Currents are horizontal, stream-like movements of water that occur at or near the surface of the ocean.

Can reach depths of several hundred meters.

Surface Current Animation

Page 20: SCIENCE 10 Wind and Ocean Currents. A Little Background … Atmospheric Pressure is the pressure the air exerts as gravity pulls it towards the earth’s

Red current = warm current Blue current = cold current

• Surface currents flow in a circular pattern– Northern Hemisphere flows clockwise– Southern Hemisphere flows counter-clockwise– Poles flow in opposite direction

• Notice that the warm currents flow from the equator

Page 21: SCIENCE 10 Wind and Ocean Currents. A Little Background … Atmospheric Pressure is the pressure the air exerts as gravity pulls it towards the earth’s

Surface Currents

Controlled by three factors:1. Prevailing winds = Cause surface currents to

flow in the direction the wind is blowing (top 400 m)

2. Coriolis Effect3. Continental Deflections = shape of the land it

flows up against.

Page 22: SCIENCE 10 Wind and Ocean Currents. A Little Background … Atmospheric Pressure is the pressure the air exerts as gravity pulls it towards the earth’s

Deep Currents

Deep Currents are a stream-like movement of ocean water far below the surface.

Caused by changes in densityThis change in density is the result of

changing temperature and salinity(saltiness)

Page 23: SCIENCE 10 Wind and Ocean Currents. A Little Background … Atmospheric Pressure is the pressure the air exerts as gravity pulls it towards the earth’s

Causes, in-depth ;)Change in temperature

Decreasing the temperature (it’s colder) of water increases density (water sinks)

Change in salinity Increasing the salinity of water increases density (again, making

water sink) Salinity increases because when water at the poles freezes, the salt

doesn’t freeze so it’s left behind and sinks to the ocean floor and is replaced by new water (hence the current)

Both TEMPERATURE AND SALINITY causes warmer less dense water from the equator to move and to be replaced (water will always want to be level and that is why the water that leaves gets replaced)

The Pic on the next page does a good job explaining this

phenomena…

Page 24: SCIENCE 10 Wind and Ocean Currents. A Little Background … Atmospheric Pressure is the pressure the air exerts as gravity pulls it towards the earth’s
Page 25: SCIENCE 10 Wind and Ocean Currents. A Little Background … Atmospheric Pressure is the pressure the air exerts as gravity pulls it towards the earth’s