Lab Exercise: Atmospheric Heating (30 points)
We will construct a model of the earth’s surface/atmosphere to explore how energy drives weather.
Read Chapter 11 of the textbook.
Part 1. Please answer the following questions in your own words:
Materials:
We will construct a model of the earth’s surface/atmosphere to explore how energy drives weather.
Read Chapter 11 of the textbook.
Part 1. Please answer the following questions in your own words:
- Explain the water cycle.
- What is dew point?
- Which source would evaporate faster, lake water or groundwater, and why?
- How do plants contribute to moisture in the air?
- Climatically, what can happen to a region when there is heavy loss of forestland?
- How is water vapor removed from the air?
- Three clear glass jars or drinking glasses
- Three small plates or bowls to be a ‘lid’ on top of the jar or drinking glass
- Chilled water, room temperature water, and hot tap water
- Ice
- In one jar, put chilled water to fill about ¼ of the jar.
- In the second jar, put room temperature water to fill about ¼ of the jar.
- In the second jar, put hot tap water to fill about ¼ of the jar.
- Cover jars with the plate or bowl with ice.
- Monitor the inside of the jars every ten minutes until the water temp in all jars is similar; make note of any changes you see.
- How long did it take for moisture to accumulate on the inside of any of the jars, and which one was first?
- Did you observe any ‘rain’ in any of the jars, and if so, which jar(s)? If not, suggest a reason why not.
- What parts of Planet Earth might each of these jars mimic?
- Explain how the evaporation and condensation processes are at work in this experiment.
Materials:
- (4) one-gallon size zipper baggies
- 6 cups of dirt (sand, soil, potting soil, whatever is available)
- 3 cups of room temperature water
- 3 small twigs with leaves off a living plant
- Tape
- Place about 2 cups of dirt into 3 separate baggies.
- Place 2 cups of water in one bag, and 1 cup of water in a second bag.
- Place the three leafy twigs in the third bag. Seal each bag.
- Place the last bag over a leafy part of a living plant; use tape to prevent moisture leaving the bag.
- Place the three bags with dirt in a warm area, either in the sun, a sunny window, heat lamp, or heater vent for 8 hours, monitoring every 2 hours.
- Record the type of soil used, and the ambient temperature for all bags.
- Observe and record any changes to each bag every 2 hours.
- Report your observations of this experiment.
- Explain how this experiment relates to drought conditions.
- What would happen if you increased the ambient temperature? What would happen if you decreased the ambient temperature?
- Compare what you found between the twig bag and the taped bag around the living branch? Were these the results you were expecting? Why or why not?
- Explain how you could set up a terrarium to account for the following; evaporation, condensation, precipitation, runoff, infiltration, and percolation.
- 3-4 pages in length
- 1-2 outside sources
- Formatted according to the CSU-Global Guide to Writing and APA Requirements.
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