Air ForceComprehensive Study Set

1W0X1 Air Force

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QUESTION 1

The 3 ways Energy gets transferred?

ANSWER

Radiation, Conduction, and Convection

QUESTION 2

What is a Black Body?

ANSWER

A perfect absorber and Emitter of radiation. This is a theory and there are NO perfect black bodies.

QUESTION 3

What is Emissivity?

ANSWER

The ratio of emitted radiation from an object to the emitted radiation from a black body at the SAME FREQUENCY (Wavelength) and Temp.

QUESTION 4

What is Absorptivity?

ANSWER

Ratio of absorbed radiation by an object to the absorbed radiation by a black body at the same wavelength and temp.

QUESTION 5

What is Reflectivity?

ANSWER

Ratio of the total amount of radiation from the object to the total amount of incident radiation. The Albedo of an object is a measurement of its reflectivity

QUESTION 6

What is Scattering?

ANSWER

Occurs when energy at a specific wavelength contacts an object about the same size as the wavelength of the incident radiation.

QUESTION 7

What is Transmissivity?

ANSWER

Ratio of energy that passes through an object to the total amount of energy received.

QUESTION 8

What are the 3 laws of Radiation Transfer?

ANSWER

Planck's Law, Kirchoff's Law, Wien's Law

QUESTION 9

Planck's Law

ANSWER

Amount of radiation emitted by a black body at a given wavelength is proportional to its Temperature.

QUESTION 10

Wien's Displacement Law

ANSWER

This law is a derivation of Planck's Law, SAYS the wavelength of the MAX irradiance of a black body depends on its Temp.

QUESTION 11

Kirchoff's Law

ANSWER

Says for objects in thermodynamic equilibrium (steady Temp), absorption of radiant energy must be equal to the emission of radiant energy. (IF an object receives more energy than it emits, the object warms, if it emits more than it absorbs the object cools.

QUESTION 12

What are METSAT advantages?

ANSWER

It is an observation that is more frequent than synoptic reports. Animated looping, so you can see the system in motion.

QUESTION 13

What are the Polar Orbiting Satellites?

ANSWER

Travel from pole to pole (N to S) Angle is 98.7 and the Altitude is 472NM, global coverage every 12 hrs. Best for global military mission.

QUESTION 14

What are the Geosynchronous Satellites?

ANSWER

19312NM/35800KM over the equator. Stays there due to the balance between centrifugal force and gravity. Same angular velocity of the rotating earth. best for fronts/lows/ severe weather/ clouds/ non-cloud features.

QUESTION 15

What are the 2 different Operational Satellites?

ANSWER

Geosynchronous and Polar Orbiting

QUESTION 16

What is Visual Imagery?

ANSWER

You see the reflectivity of features that are converted to brightness values. Wavelength = 0.4-0.74 microns

QUESTION 17

What is infrared Imagery?

ANSWER

You see the Temperature of features that are converted to brightness values. Measures the reflected sunlight and emitted energy. Wavelength = 0.75-2.0 micrometers

QUESTION 18

What is Water Vapor Imagery?

ANSWER

You see the amount of moisture sensed in a vertical layer that is converted to a brightness value. GOES = 6.7 microns METEOSAT = 7.1 microns AKA Moisture Channel

QUESTION 19

What is Sun Angle?

ANSWER

Influences the interpretation of clouds, cloud patterns, terrain features, and other atmospheric phenomena. (Time of year/latitude/cloud height)

QUESTION 20

When is absorption the highest?

ANSWER

Between 610-240MB. Mid and high level moisture affects the sensor much more than lower level moisture for WV.

QUESTION 21

Advantages of Water Vapor?

ANSWER

Determining Jets/circulation centers/troughs/ridges/wind maximums/vorticity maximums/ and TS areas.

QUESTION 22

What are Vapor Plumes?

ANSWER

Surges that are associated with large-scale circulations.

QUESTION 23

What is Far Infrared

ANSWER

Measure the long-wave radiation of objects (clouds and ground) using a wavelength of 10.2-12.8 microns. DOES NOT depend on reflected sunlight for an image.

QUESTION 24

What is Thresholding?

ANSWER

Assigning a gray shade to a temperature range.

QUESTION 25

What is a Brilliance Inversion?

ANSWER

Assigning a range of temperature to a range of gray shades.

QUESTION 26

What is a ZA Curve?

ANSWER

It is a GOES enhancement. Curve closest to a straight linear curve. WV uses this.

QUESTION 27

What is a EC Curve?

ANSWER

It is a GOES enhancement. A cool season general purpose curve. From -13 to -50 is associated with precip during a cool season.

QUESTION 28

What is a MB Curve?

ANSWER

It is a GOES enhancement. All purpose curve, most commonly used for convective activity.

QUESTION 29

What JG Curve?

ANSWER

It is a GOES enhancement. This is a wintertime curve, used to define water currents, low status, and coastal fog, helps determine freezing line.

QUESTION 30

What is a CC Curve?

ANSWER

It is a GOES enhancement. Designed for cloud interpretation in colder Northern Latitudes in the winter. Its easier to determine low-mid clouds.

QUESTION 31

What is a HF Curve?

ANSWER

It is a GOES enhancement. Designed for W coast forecasters to enhance systems over the Pacific.

QUESTION 32

What is Attenuation?

ANSWER

Any loss of energy due to absorption and scattering of IR radiation by atmospheric elements. Greatest in the tropics due to moisture content.

QUESTION 33

What affects Attenuation?

ANSWER

The more water vapor there is, the greater the attenuation?

QUESTION 34

What is Contamination?

ANSWER

Energy sensed by the satellite from 2 or more sources along the same line of sight. Inaccurate cloud-tops, and the amount of contamination depends on the viewing angle.

QUESTION 35

What is Foreshortening?

ANSWER

Loss of resolution caused by the Oblique (shallow) viewing angle that results in a distortion near the edge of the picture on any type of METSAT image. Overestimates the loud coverage. Most noticeable in Geosynchronous.

QUESTION 36

What is Time Response?

ANSWER

Time it takes for the sensor to heat up/cool off when it reacts to large temp changes.

QUESTION 37

What is SSM/I (Special microwave/ Imagery?)

ANSWER

This measures the critical atmospheric, oceanographic, and land parameters. Shows the eye of the vortex and deeply convective regions.

QUESTION 38

What is Brightness Temperature?

ANSWER

It is the Temp of an object/SFC appears to have when we measure the intensity of its emitted radiation at a particular frequency/wavelength. (Low emissivity-water- looks colder than they really are)

QUESTION 39

SSM/I More

ANSWER

Passively detects emitted and reflected microwave radiation at 4 frequencies (19.3-22.2-37.0-85.5 gigahertz GHz) the 22.2, has 1 channel and measures WV unpolarized signal. The others have 2 channels (One horizontal/vertical). Orbits at 833KM, 98.8 inclination. Takes 102 minutes and gives 14.1 revolutions per day. Speed = 6.58km/sec. Scans 1400KM. Gaps = occur between 30N and 30S. 99% probability of viewing a storm in the tropics at least once a day. Resolution is 25KM, the rain rate resolution is the highest at 15KM and lowest at 50KM.

QUESTION 40

What are the advantages of the SSM/I?

ANSWER

Little-no attenuation. Ice clouds are transparent to microwave.

QUESTION 41

What are the SSM/I products?

ANSWER

2 forms: SDR (Sensor data records) and EDR (environmental data records)

QUESTION 42

What are EDR's?

ANSWER

environmental data records: derived from the SDR and contain environmental parameters directly usable by meteorologists and oceanographers. AKA Oceanic total precipitable water.

QUESTION 43

How do you process an EDR or SDR?

ANSWER

It depends on the SFC type. Land-sea-ice parameter.

QUESTION 44

What is the data accuracy of the SDR and EDR?

ANSWER

SDR, accurate within 1 Kelvin. EDR, within 12KM resolution.

QUESTION 45

What are the 4 channels and what does each do best?

ANSWER

22.2 = viewing WV 85 = viewing rain/clouds 19 & 37 =Viewing surface phenomena.

QUESTION 46

What is the emissivity of Bare Soil?

ANSWER

0.9-.95 at microwave frequencies.

QUESTION 47

Army

ANSWER

They are interested in soil moisture. Helps determine the trafficability

QUESTION 48

How does SSM/I help with tropical storm tracking?

ANSWER

The precision of tracking, means they can locate the eye at the sfc. 85 channel reveal eye and wind streaming into PBL.

QUESTION 49

What are the four types of pure Motion?

ANSWER

Translation, Rotation, Divergence, and Deformation

QUESTION 50

What is Translation?

ANSWER

Movement in a straight line.

QUESTION 51

What is Rotation?

ANSWER

Turning about a point

QUESTION 52

What is Divergence?

ANSWER

Spreading or contracting of the wind field.

QUESTION 53

What is Deformation?

ANSWER

The stretching or shearing of the wind field.

QUESTION 54

What are System Perspective winds?

ANSWER

Rotation and deformation are the 2 main types of motion. They are responsible for the shape of the cloud mass on satellite.

QUESTION 55

Visible Image

ANSWER

Best spatial resolution. Only available during the daylight. Entire synoptic-scale features do not fit on the screen. Best to find surface cyclones.

QUESTION 56

Inferred Image

ANSWER

24 hours a day, easier to determine cloud tops , low level items are hard to detect. Best to find upper-level cyclones

QUESTION 57

Water vapor Image

ANSWER

Analyze the jet stream and synoptic systems, shows the interaction between the middle lats and the tropical systems. Interpretation is not straightforward. Used to detect upper deformation zones.

QUESTION 58

Enhancement curves

ANSWER

Most loopers enhance the pixel brightness rather than the Temp. You cannot split repeat colors, no more than 2 colors is best.

QUESTION 59

What makes Image intervals best?

ANSWER

Planetary scale: 3-6 hr intervals are best Synoptic scale: 2 HR is satisfactory, 1 HR is ideal. Generally the smaller the size and time scales of the phenomena, the shorter the intervals needed between the pictures is the loop.

QUESTION 60

Where does the heaviest precip fall?

ANSWER

From synoptic scale systems, along the southern edge of the coldest cloud tops. Rapidly cooling cloud tops are the indication that precip will increase.

QUESTION 61

How does a shortwave interact with a front?

ANSWER

The cloud pattern is the first indicator. A slight S shape develops on the cold-air side of the cloud pattern.

QUESTION 62

What is the smallest cloud you can see on an image?

ANSWER

Cumulus or altocumulus.

QUESTION 63

What are cloud Fingers?

ANSWER

Low-level cloud that develop because of LL convergence.

QUESTION 64

What are Cloud Lines?

ANSWER

A nearly continuous cloud formation, where elements are connected and the line is les that 1 inch in width. Formed by LL instability by a large air/sea temp difference. Strong vertical speed shear or strong LL winds >15kts and an inversion that caps the vertical development of a cloud.

QUESTION 65

What are Cloud Streets?

ANSWER

Very similar to cloud lines, although the elements are NOT connected, they are parallel. Formed due to strong vertical wind shear and surface heating. Not more than 60NM.

QUESTION 66

Fog/Stratus

ANSWER

Variety of grey shades on IR, during the different seasons. Easiest to see on VIS, because of the contrast between the cloud and the terrain. In a MT or hilly areas have a vein-like appearance. They are their brightest over deep terrain. May look like snow on mountain ridges. On FIR looks dark grey, due to the small thermal contrast. Sometimes black stratus)

QUESTION 67

Stratus

ANSWER

These are low clouds caused by the advection of warm moist air over a cooler area.

QUESTION 68

Fog

ANSWER

It is a stratiform cloud with its base on the ground. Composed of water droplets. Radiation and sea fog are the best seen on imagery. Dissipates from the outer edges into the middle due to differential heating.

QUESTION 69

Stratocumulus

ANSWER

Formed by the spreading out of CU or the lifting of status. Needs a stable layer aloft, and limited vertical mixing in the lower levels, usually a subsidence or radiation inversion. Forms due to weak CAA over a warm surface. VIS= light grey to white shaded, continuous sheet of parallel rolls or cellular elements textured appearance.

QUESTION 70

Cumulus

ANSWER

Small vertically developed clouds formed due to surface heating, LL convergence, or both. VIS= unorganized Popcorn shapes. Uniform lighter gray shade.

QUESTION 71

Towering Cumulus

ANSWER

Needs a more unstable atmosphere, more vertically developed the CU, easier to see on imagery. They are circular clouds.

QUESTION 72

Cumulonimbus

ANSWER

CU cloud with strong vertical development, with or without a anvil cirrus plume. Can develop singularly, in clusters, or in lines. We can find the overshooting tops when the sun angle is low. Smaller CB clouds are hard to find when they are embedded in a cirrostratus shield.

QUESTION 73

Closed cell SC

ANSWER

Closed packed, form over oceans. Found in large sheets, generally winds <20KTS and direction is perpendicular to the strands. Formed due to LL instability, or to convective mixing with a strong subsidence inversion. On FIR similar to stratus, thermally warm.

QUESTION 74

Open-celled CU

ANSWER

usually form over water, behind the mid-lat cyclones caused by strong CAA over warmed water. Associated with cyclonic or straight-line flow. Weak inversion caps vertical development. Usually higher than the closed cell. Looks like chicken wire. Has larger cloud elements.

QUESTION 75

Transverse Bands

ANSWER

Speeds are usually greater than 80KTs

QUESTION 76

Snow

ANSWER

VIS works best, because of the brightness contrast. Sun angle is an important factor. Best to see at a low cloud angle.

QUESTION 77

Dust

ANSWER

Filmy, diffuse appearance med-light grey scale on VIS and FIR it is dark-medium

QUESTION 78

Haze

ANSWER

VIS= appears to be dull, filmy, and diffuse light-med scale depending on density. FIR=appear I=only if it is at high alts, or large concentrations. Contamination is a large factor.

QUESTION 79

What is sun Glint?

ANSWER

Caused by the reflection of the suns rays off the water surface directly into the METSAT data, seen only on VIS. Occurs only in stable conditions, with light or calm winds. Geostationary=circular shape. Polar=the higher the wind speed the larger and more diffuse the glint zone

QUESTION 80

What do we use sun glint for?

ANSWER

To estimate the surface wind speeds, direction, in an anticyclonic flow and sea state.

QUESTION 81

What is the terminator?

ANSWER

Seen only on VIS. Transition from day to night.

QUESTION 82

What is a Col

ANSWER

Neutral point. Center of the deformation zone where winds are calm

QUESTION 83

Axis of Dilatation

ANSWER

Horizontal axis where the wind is moving away form the col

QUESTION 84

Axis of contraction

ANSWER

Horizontal axis of winds moving towards the col

QUESTION 85

What 3 things make up the comma cloud?

ANSWER

Baroclinic zone, Vorticity comma-cloud system, deformation zone

QUESTION 86

Baroclinic zone

ANSWER

Associated with the thickness ribbon

QUESTION 87

Vorticity comma cloud system

ANSWER

Associated with a vorticity max

QUESTION 88

What is a Surge region?

ANSWER

Dry slot.

QUESTION 89

Baroclinic Zone cirrus

ANSWER

AKA cirrostratus. Forms on the equatorward side of the jet. AKA Cirrus shields. The jet axis position is 1 lat on the poleward side of the cloud edge.

QUESTION 90

Cirrus streaks

ANSWER

Forms parallel to, and on the equatorward side of the jet stream.

QUESTION 91

Lee-of the mountain Cirrus

ANSWER

If the jet stream axis is located with this cloud feature, its about 1 degrees of lat on the poleward side of the cirrus cloud.

QUESTION 92

What happens when a Trough intersects the frontal cloud bands?

ANSWER

When you see a 500MB trough intersect a frontal cloud band, the trough is in a N-S orientation. You may see a Slight S develop, or you may see a separate cluster or small comma cloud develop in the cold air behind the band.

QUESTION 93

Minor to major SWT

ANSWER

When the CU begins to take on the comma cloud shape the minor is developing into a major short wave trough.

QUESTION 94

Upper Lows

ANSWER

Usually found in the upper deformation zone. The Low is positioned slightly West of the center of the swirl of the cloudiness within the deformation cirrus.

QUESTION 95

Deformation zone cirrus

ANSWER

Usually NE-SW direction

QUESTION 96

Baroclinic leaf

ANSWER

Caused by mid-level deformation ahead of the Jet Max, upstream from the leaf

QUESTION 97

MCC (mesoscale convective complexes)

ANSWER

Organized, persistent, deep convection. During the warm season. Forms in the moist unstable zone in the afternoon. Cells grow and merge, begins to look like one cell. Trigger=Convergence of the outflow boundary associated with the individual cells

QUESTION 98

Dvorak Method

ANSWER

For tropical cyclones. Day by day changes in the cloud pattern of the storm and its environment

QUESTION 99

What is the most important rule of the tropical storm analysis?

ANSWER

The pattern the clouds forms, is the intensity of the cyclone. We use the T number to describe the rate of development or dissipation of the tropical cyclone, defined by the cloud features related to its intensity.

QUESTION 100

CI Number

ANSWER

A indicator of the tropical cyclone development. Operational practice.

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