EES 414 :Atmospheric Sciences (3)
Prerequisites: MTH, PHY and CHM 100 level courses and EES 100 and 200 level courses
Learning Objectives:
This course is designed as a first level course for undergraduate students; upon the completion of this course, the student will be able to understand the evolution of the Earth’s atmosphere, tools to observe it, and its properties. Additionally the students will learn to formulate and apply equations to solve problems on atmospheric dynamics, radiation and thermodynamics. Finally the sub-disciplines of atmospheric science and their inter-relationships will be discussed.
Course Contents:
Unit-1: Introduction
Significance of studying atmospheric sciences in the regional and global contexts, prediction of
weather and climate change, identification and remediation of environmental threats; Recent trends
and emerging frontiers.
Unit-2: Earth’s Atmosphere
Sun and its origin, evolution of the Earth and its atmosphere - elements and compounds, spectrum of
radiation of the sun and Earth, Sun Earth relationships - seasons, heat budget, latitudinal heat budget.
Unit-3: Atmospheric Observations
Overview of meteorological observations, measurement of temperature, humidity, pressure, wind and
precipitation, high altitude observations, weather RADAR and satellites, vertical structure and
composition of the atmosphere.
Unit-4: Atmospheric Motion
Wind systems and the atmosphere, forces that drive the winds - pressure gradient; Coriolis,
centrifugal, friction, scales of atmospheric motion; Global circulation of single cell and three cell
models - observed distribution of pressure and winds, monsoons, westerlies and waves in the
westerlies.
Unit-5: Atmospheric Radiation
Quantitative description of radiation, blackbody radiation, Planck’s function, local thermodynamic
equilibrium, budget of solar radiation, terrestrial radiation, absorption and emission by atmospheric
gases, scattering by air molecules and particles, absorption by particles, Beer-Lambert’s law, radiative
energy balance, simplified models of the greenhouse effect.
Unit-6: Atmospheric Thermodynamics
Basic definitions, gas laws, hydrostatic balance; First law of thermodynamics, moisture in the
atmosphere, measure and description of moist air, isobaric cooling, adiabatic and pseudo adiabatic processes, hydrodynamic stability - air parcel and slice methods, vertical mixing, vertical stability in the atmosphere, stability analysis and conditions, Second law of thermodynamics, Carnot cycle and
Clausius Clapeyron equation.
Unit-7: Atmospheric Chemistry
Chemical structure, reactivity, and lifetime of chemicals; Overview of tropospheric and stratospheric
chemistry - Ozone depletion.
Suggested Readings :
- Wallace, J. M., and Hobbs, P. V., 2006, Atmospheric Science: An introductory Survey, Academic Press.
- Ahrens, C. D., 2015, Essentials of Meteorology: An Invitation to the Atmosphere, Stamford Brooks/Cole Cengage Learning.
- Frederic, J., 2008, Principles of Atmospheric Science, Jones and Bartlett Publishers.
- Seinfeld, J., and Pandis, S N., 2006, Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics: From Air Pollution to Climate Change (2 nd Edition), Wiley-Interscience.
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