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American Meteorological Society
Industry: Weather
Number of terms: 60695
Number of blossaries: 0
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The American Meteorological Society promotes the development and dissemination of information and education on the atmospheric and related oceanic and hydrologic sciences and the advancement of their professional applications. Founded in 1919, AMS has a membership of more than 14,000 professionals, ...
Temperature changes related to changes of pressure without external gain or loss of heat. In a compressible fluid, such as seawater, temperature rises as the fluid is compressed and adiabatic cooling occurs during expansion. The latter is of practical concern when water samples taken in thermally insulated water bottles are taken at great depth and raised to the surface.
Industry:Weather
Pressure at the saturation level.
Industry:Weather
See lifting condensation level, saturation level.
Industry:Weather
Same as adiabatic chart.
Industry:Weather
A process in which a system does not interact with its surroundings by virtue of a temperature difference between them. In an adiabatic process any change in internal energy (for a system of fixed mass) is solely a consequence of working. For an ideal gas and for most atmospheric systems, compression results in warming, expansion results in cooling. See dry-adiabatic process, moist-adiabatic process.
Industry:Weather
See adiabatic process.
Industry:Weather
In most contexts, same as dry-adiabatic lapse rate.
Industry:Weather
See equivalent temperature.
Industry:Weather
A vertical distribution of temperature and pressure in an atmosphere in hydrostatic equilibrium such that an air parcel displaced adiabatically will continue to possess the same temperature and pressure as its surroundings, so that no restoring force acts on a parcel displaced vertically. A layer in adiabatic equilibrium has uniform equivalent potential temperature. The state of adiabatic equilibrium is approached in a layer of air in which there is strong vertical mixing. Compare static stability.
Industry:Weather
Same as condensation temperature.
Industry:Weather