A geomagnetic storm is a temporary disturbance of the Earth's magnetosphere caused by a disturbance in space weather. Associated with solar flares and resultant solar coronal mass ejections (CME), a geomagnetic storm is caused by a solar wind shock wave and/or cloud of magnetic field which typically strikes the Earth's magnetic field 3 days after the event. The solar wind pressure on the magnetosphere and the solar wind magnetic field will increase or decrease depending on the Sun's activity. The solar wind pressure changes modify the electric currents in the ionosphere, and the solar wind's magnetic field interacts with the Earth's magnetic field causing the entire structure to evolve. Magnetic storms usually last 24 to 48 hours, but some may last for many days.
Interactions with planetary processes
The solar wind also carries with it the magnetic field of the Sun. This field will have either a North or South orientation. If the solar wind has energetic bursts, contracting and expanding the magnetosphere, or if the solar wind takes a southward polarization, geomagnetic storms can be expected. The southward field causes magnetic reconnection of the dayside magnetopause, rapidly injecting magnetic and particle energy into the Earth's magnetosphere.
During a geomagnetic storm, the ionosphere's F2 layer will become unstable, fragment, and may even disappear. In the northern and southern pole regions of the Earth, auroras will be observable in the sky.
Geomagnetic storm effects
Drumlin – an elongated whale-shaped hill formed by glacial action.
Radiation hazards to humans
Biology
Disrupted systems
Communications
Navigation systems
Satellite hardware damage
Geologic exploration
Electric grid
Pipelines
aurora polaris
Friday, 24 December 2010
Thunderstorm
A thunderstorm, also known as an electrical storm, a lightning storm, thundershower or simply a storm is a form of weather characterized by the presence of lightning and its acoustic effect on the Earth's atmosphere known as thunder. The meteorologically-assigned cloud type associated with the thunderstorm is the cumulonimbus. Thunderstorms are usually accompanied by strong winds, heavy rain and sometimes snow, sleet, hail, or no precipitation at all. Those which cause hail to fall are known as hailstorms. Thunderstorms may line up in a series or rainband, known as a squall line. Strong or severe thunderstorms may rotate, known as supercells. While most thunderstorms move with the mean wind flow through the layer of the troposphere that they occupy, vertical wind shear causes a deviation in their course at a right angle to the wind shear direction.
Thunderstorms result from the rapid upward movement of warm, moist air. They can occur inside warm, moist air masses and at fronts. As the warm, moist air moves upward, its cools, condenses, and forms cumulonimbus clouds that can reach heights of over 20 km. As the rising air reaches its dew point, water droplets and ice form and begin falling the long distance through the clouds towards the Earth's surface. As the droplets fall, they collide with other droplets and become larger. The falling droplets create a downdraft of air that spreads out at the Earth's surface and causes strong winds associated with thunderstorms.
Thunderstorms can generally form and develop in any geographic location, perhaps most frequently within areas located at mid-latitude when warm moist air collides with cooler air. Thunderstorms are responsible for the development and formation of many severe weather phenomena. Thunderstorms, and the phenomena that occur along with them, pose great hazards to populations and landscapes. Damage that results from thunderstorms is mainly inflicted by downburst winds, large hailstones, and flash flooding caused by heavy precipitation. Stronger thunderstorm cells are capable of producing tornadoes and waterspouts.
There are four types of thunderstorms: single-cell, multicell cluster, multicell lines, and supercells. Supercell thunderstorms are the strongest and the most associated with severe weather phenomena. Mesoscale convective systems formed by favorable vertical wind shear within the tropics and subtropics are responsible for the development of hurricanes. Dry thunderstorms, with no precipitation, can cause the outbreak of wildfires with the heat generated from the cloud-to-ground lightning that accompanies them. Several methods are used to study thunderstorms, such as weather radar, weather stations, and video photography. Past civilizations held various myths concerning thunderstorms and their development as late as the Eighteenth Century. Other than within the Earth's atmosphere, thunderstorms have also been observed on Jupiter and Venus.
Thunderstorms result from the rapid upward movement of warm, moist air. They can occur inside warm, moist air masses and at fronts. As the warm, moist air moves upward, its cools, condenses, and forms cumulonimbus clouds that can reach heights of over 20 km. As the rising air reaches its dew point, water droplets and ice form and begin falling the long distance through the clouds towards the Earth's surface. As the droplets fall, they collide with other droplets and become larger. The falling droplets create a downdraft of air that spreads out at the Earth's surface and causes strong winds associated with thunderstorms.
Thunderstorms can generally form and develop in any geographic location, perhaps most frequently within areas located at mid-latitude when warm moist air collides with cooler air. Thunderstorms are responsible for the development and formation of many severe weather phenomena. Thunderstorms, and the phenomena that occur along with them, pose great hazards to populations and landscapes. Damage that results from thunderstorms is mainly inflicted by downburst winds, large hailstones, and flash flooding caused by heavy precipitation. Stronger thunderstorm cells are capable of producing tornadoes and waterspouts.
There are four types of thunderstorms: single-cell, multicell cluster, multicell lines, and supercells. Supercell thunderstorms are the strongest and the most associated with severe weather phenomena. Mesoscale convective systems formed by favorable vertical wind shear within the tropics and subtropics are responsible for the development of hurricanes. Dry thunderstorms, with no precipitation, can cause the outbreak of wildfires with the heat generated from the cloud-to-ground lightning that accompanies them. Several methods are used to study thunderstorms, such as weather radar, weather stations, and video photography. Past civilizations held various myths concerning thunderstorms and their development as late as the Eighteenth Century. Other than within the Earth's atmosphere, thunderstorms have also been observed on Jupiter and Venus.
Alluvial fan
An alluvial fan is a fan-shaped deposit formed where a fast flowing stream flattens, slows, and spreads typically at the exit of a canyon onto a flatter plain.
Formation
Owing to the flow as stream gradient decreases, coarse-grained solid material carried by the water is dropped. As this reduces the capacity of the channel, the channel will change direction over time, gradually building up a slightly mounded or shallow conical fan shape. The deposits are usually poorly-sorted. This fan shape can also be explained with a thermodynamic justification: the system of sediment introduced at the apex of the fan will tend to a state which minimizes the sum of the transport energy involved in moving the sediment and the gravitational potential of material in the cone. There will be iso-transport energy lines forming concentric arcs about the discharge point at the apex of the fan. Thus the material will tend to be deposited equally about these lines, forming the characteristic cone shape.
In arid climates
Alluvial fans are often found in desert areas subject to periodic flash floods from nearby thunderstorms in local hills. They are common around the margins of the sedimentary basins of the Basin and Range province of southwestern North America. The typical watercourse in an arid climate has a large, funnel-shaped basin at the top, leading to a narrow defile, which opens out into an alluvial fan at the bottom. Multiple braided streams are usually present and active during water flows.
Phreatophytes are plants that are often concentrated at the base of alluvial fans, which have long tap roots 30 to 50 feet (9.1 to 15 m) to reach water. The water at this level is derived from water that has seeped through the fan and hit an impermeable layer that funneled the water to the base of the fan where it is concentrated and sometimes forms springs and seeps if the water is close enough to the surface. These stands of shrubs cling onto the soil at their bases and over time wind action often blows away sand around the bushes which form islands of habitat for many animals.
In humid climates
Alluvial fans also develop in wetter climates. In Nepal the Koshi River has built a megafan covering some 150,000 km2 (58,000 sq mi) below its exit from Himalayan foothills onto the nearly level plains the river traverses into India before joining the Ganges. Along the upper Koshi tributaries, tectonic forces elevate the Himalayas several millimeters annually. Uplift is approximately in equilibrium with erosion, so the river annually carries some 100 million cubic meters (3.5 billion cu ft) of sediment as it exits the mountains. Deposition of this magnitude over millions of years is more than sufficient to account for the megafan.In North America, streams flowing into California's Central Valley have deposited smaller but still extensive alluvial fans. That of the Kings River flowing out of the Sierra Nevada creates a low divide, turning the south end of the San Joaquin Valley into an Endorheic basin without a connection to the ocean.
Formation
Owing to the flow as stream gradient decreases, coarse-grained solid material carried by the water is dropped. As this reduces the capacity of the channel, the channel will change direction over time, gradually building up a slightly mounded or shallow conical fan shape. The deposits are usually poorly-sorted. This fan shape can also be explained with a thermodynamic justification: the system of sediment introduced at the apex of the fan will tend to a state which minimizes the sum of the transport energy involved in moving the sediment and the gravitational potential of material in the cone. There will be iso-transport energy lines forming concentric arcs about the discharge point at the apex of the fan. Thus the material will tend to be deposited equally about these lines, forming the characteristic cone shape.
In arid climates
Alluvial fans are often found in desert areas subject to periodic flash floods from nearby thunderstorms in local hills. They are common around the margins of the sedimentary basins of the Basin and Range province of southwestern North America. The typical watercourse in an arid climate has a large, funnel-shaped basin at the top, leading to a narrow defile, which opens out into an alluvial fan at the bottom. Multiple braided streams are usually present and active during water flows.
Phreatophytes are plants that are often concentrated at the base of alluvial fans, which have long tap roots 30 to 50 feet (9.1 to 15 m) to reach water. The water at this level is derived from water that has seeped through the fan and hit an impermeable layer that funneled the water to the base of the fan where it is concentrated and sometimes forms springs and seeps if the water is close enough to the surface. These stands of shrubs cling onto the soil at their bases and over time wind action often blows away sand around the bushes which form islands of habitat for many animals.
In humid climates
Alluvial fans also develop in wetter climates. In Nepal the Koshi River has built a megafan covering some 150,000 km2 (58,000 sq mi) below its exit from Himalayan foothills onto the nearly level plains the river traverses into India before joining the Ganges. Along the upper Koshi tributaries, tectonic forces elevate the Himalayas several millimeters annually. Uplift is approximately in equilibrium with erosion, so the river annually carries some 100 million cubic meters (3.5 billion cu ft) of sediment as it exits the mountains. Deposition of this magnitude over millions of years is more than sufficient to account for the megafan.In North America, streams flowing into California's Central Valley have deposited smaller but still extensive alluvial fans. That of the Kings River flowing out of the Sierra Nevada creates a low divide, turning the south end of the San Joaquin Valley into an Endorheic basin without a connection to the ocean.
Hills
The distinction between a hill and a mountain is unclear and largely subjective, but a hill is generally somewhat lower and less steep than a mountain. In the United Kingdom geographers historically regarded mountains as hills greater than 1,000 feet (300 m) above sea level, which formed the basis of the plot of the 1995 film The Englishman Who Went Up a Hill But Came Down a Mountain. In contrast, hillwalkers have tended to regard mountains as peaks 2,000 feet (610 m) above sea level: the Oxford English Dictionary also suggests a limit of 2,000 feet (610 m). This has led to Cavanal Hill in Poteau, Oklahoma, receive billing as the "World's Tallest Hill" due to its height of 1,999 feet (609 m). Mountains in Scotland are frequently referred to as "hills" no matter what their height, as reflected in names such as the Cuillin Hills and the Torridon Hills. In Wales, the distinction is more a term of land use and appearance and has nothing to do with height.
A hillock is a small hill. Other words include knoll and (in Scotland, Northern Ireland and northern England) its variant, knowe.Artificial hills may be referred to by a variety of technical names, including mound and tumulus.
Hills may form through a number of geomorphic phenomena: faulting, erosion of larger landforms, such as mountains and movement and deposition of sediment by glaciers (eg. moraines and drumlins, or by erosion exposing solid rock which then weathers down into a hill. The rounded peaks of hills results from the diffusive movement of soil and regolith covering the hill, a process known as downhill creep.
Areas that would otherwise have hills do not because of glacier cover during the Ice Age. The hills that existed before the ice age were worn down by the ice (and the rocks they carry) and/or the surrounding valleys and hollows were filled in with glacial drift, therefore leaving a level topography. The contrast between the flat plains of northern Indiana, once covered by ice, and the rugged hills of southern Indiana, where the ice never reached, is a result of this. Another example is the Driftless Zone, an island of hilly country that the ice sheets missed, surrounded by glacial plains, also in the American Midwest.
There are various specific names used to describe particular types of hill, based on appearance and method of formation. Many such names originated in one geographical region to describe a type of hill formation peculiar to that region, though the names are often adopted by geologists and used in a wider geographical context. These include:
A hillock is a small hill. Other words include knoll and (in Scotland, Northern Ireland and northern England) its variant, knowe.Artificial hills may be referred to by a variety of technical names, including mound and tumulus.
Hills may form through a number of geomorphic phenomena: faulting, erosion of larger landforms, such as mountains and movement and deposition of sediment by glaciers (eg. moraines and drumlins, or by erosion exposing solid rock which then weathers down into a hill. The rounded peaks of hills results from the diffusive movement of soil and regolith covering the hill, a process known as downhill creep.
Areas that would otherwise have hills do not because of glacier cover during the Ice Age. The hills that existed before the ice age were worn down by the ice (and the rocks they carry) and/or the surrounding valleys and hollows were filled in with glacial drift, therefore leaving a level topography. The contrast between the flat plains of northern Indiana, once covered by ice, and the rugged hills of southern Indiana, where the ice never reached, is a result of this. Another example is the Driftless Zone, an island of hilly country that the ice sheets missed, surrounded by glacial plains, also in the American Midwest.
There are various specific names used to describe particular types of hill, based on appearance and method of formation. Many such names originated in one geographical region to describe a type of hill formation peculiar to that region, though the names are often adopted by geologists and used in a wider geographical context. These include:
- Drumlin – an elongated whale-shaped hill formed by glacial action.
- Butte – an isolated hill with steep sides and a small flat top, formed by weathering.
- Tor – a rock formation found on a hilltop; also used to refer to the hill itself, especially in South West England.
- Puy – used especially in the Auvergne, France, to describe a conical volcanic hill.
- Pingo – a mound of earth-covered ice found in the Arctic and Antarctica.
Thursday, 25 November 2010
Soil
Soil is a natural body consisting of layers (soil horizons) of mineral constituents of variable thicknesses, which differ from the parent materials in their morphological, physical, chemical, and mineralogical characteristics. It is composed of particles of broken rock that have been altered by chemical and environmental processes that include weathering and erosion. Soil differs from its parent rock due to interactions between the lithosphere, hydrosphere, atmosphere, and the biosphere. It is a mixture of mineral and organic constituents that are in solid, gaseous and aqueous states.
Soil particles pack loosely, forming a soil structure filled with pore spaces. These pores contain soil solution (liquid) and air (gas). Accordingly, soils are often treated as a three state system. Most soils have a density between 1 and 2 g/cm³. Soil is also known as earth: it is the substance from which our planet takes its name. Little of the soil composition of planet Earth is older than the Tertiary and most no older than the Pleistocene. In engineering, soil is referred to as regolith, or loose rock material.
Soil horizons
The naming of soil horizons is based on the type of material the horizons are composed of; these materials reflect the duration of the specific processes used in soil formation. They are labeled using a short hand notation of letters and numbers. They are described and classified by their color, size, texture, structure, consistency, root quantity, pH, voids, boundary characteristics, and if they have nodules or concretions.Any one soil profile does not have all the major horizons covered below; soils may have few or many horizons.
The exposure of parent material to favorable conditions produces initial soils that are suitable for plant growth. Plant growth often results in the accumulation of organic residues, the accumulated organic layer is called the O horizon. Biological organisms colonize and break down organic materials, making available nutrients that other plants and animals can live on. After sufficient time a distinctive organic surface layer forms with humus which is called the A horizon.
Soil particles pack loosely, forming a soil structure filled with pore spaces. These pores contain soil solution (liquid) and air (gas). Accordingly, soils are often treated as a three state system. Most soils have a density between 1 and 2 g/cm³. Soil is also known as earth: it is the substance from which our planet takes its name. Little of the soil composition of planet Earth is older than the Tertiary and most no older than the Pleistocene. In engineering, soil is referred to as regolith, or loose rock material.
Soil horizons
The naming of soil horizons is based on the type of material the horizons are composed of; these materials reflect the duration of the specific processes used in soil formation. They are labeled using a short hand notation of letters and numbers. They are described and classified by their color, size, texture, structure, consistency, root quantity, pH, voids, boundary characteristics, and if they have nodules or concretions.Any one soil profile does not have all the major horizons covered below; soils may have few or many horizons.
The exposure of parent material to favorable conditions produces initial soils that are suitable for plant growth. Plant growth often results in the accumulation of organic residues, the accumulated organic layer is called the O horizon. Biological organisms colonize and break down organic materials, making available nutrients that other plants and animals can live on. After sufficient time a distinctive organic surface layer forms with humus which is called the A horizon.
Typhoon
Typhoon formation
The typhoon origin, until now still was unable extremely todetermine, but known it is comes by the tropics atmosphere inperturbation development. On the tropics sea, the sea level because ofcauses the vertical incident solar rays the sea temperature toelevate, the sea water is easy to evaporate the water vapor to spreadin airborne, therefore on tropics sea air temperature high, humiditybig, this kind of air high inflates because of the temperature, causesthe density to reduce, the quality reduces, but nearby equator windpower weak, therefore is very easy to rise, has the convectioncurrent, simultaneously periphery the colder air inflow supplemented,then rises again, so moves in endless cycles, the end must entirecause for the temperature higher, the weight to be all lighter,a density smaller air, this has formed so-called "the tropicaldepression". However flowing of the air is the proud barometricpressure flows to the low atmospheric pressure, looks like is thewater flows to the low spot from the high place to be same, all aroundthe barometric pressure compares the high place the air to have tocompare the low spot to the barometric pressure to flow, but forms"the wind". In summer, because the vertical incident solar rays regionmoves by the equator to the north, causes of southeast trade crossingthe line the southern hemisphere to change the southwest monsoon toinvade Northern Hemisphere, meets one another with the originalNorthern Hemisphere's Northeast Tradewind, compels crowds this airrise, the increase convection current, again because the southwestmonsoon and the Northeast Tradewind direction is different, meets oneanother often creates the undulation and the whirlpool. This kind ofsouthwest monsoon and the Northeast Tradewind meet one another thespoke which creates to gather the function, with the originalconvection current continuously, causes to form continues for the lowatmospheric pressure whirlpool to deepen, when is causes all aroundthe air speeds up to the whirlpool center class, the inflow quickly,its wind speed is bigger; When the near ground most gale fast arrivesor surpasses each second 17.2 meters, we called it is the typhoon.
Saw from the typhoon structure, the so giant colossus, it producesmust meet the unique requirement.
First, must have broad high temperature, the humidity atmosphere. Thetropics on first floor atmosphere temperature and the humiditymainly decided to the sea level water temperature, the typhoon onlycan form Yu Haiwen is higher than 26 ℃ - 27 ℃ is warm on,moreover in 60 meters depths sea water water temperatures all must behigher than 26 ℃ - 27 ℃;
Second, must have the lower atmosphere high level to gather, theinitial perturbation to the central spoke which proliferates tooutside. Moreover the high level spoke disperses must surpass theunderlying bed spoke to gather, can maintain the enough ascendantcurrent, the underlying bed perturbation can unceasingly strengthen;
Third, the vertical direction wind speed cannot differ too in a bigway, on the lower level air relative motion is very small, can causeto dive the heat energy centralism preservation which in the initialperturbation the water vapor congeals releases in the area center, forms and strengthens the typhoon warm centerstructure
Fourth, must have the enough big place to transfer thefunction, the earth rotation function is advantageous to the cyclonevortex production. Transfers approaches nearby the equatorto zero, increases to the north and south two-pole, the typhoon occursprobably is leaving above the equator 5 latitudes on.
Typhoon preventing and controlling
Strengthens the typhoon the monitor and the forecast, isreduces the typhoon disaster the important measure. Mainly uses themeteorological satellite to the typhoon survey. In the satellite cloudchart, can clearly see the typhoon the existence and the size. Usingthe meteorological satellite material, may determine the center of atyphoon the position, estimated the typhoon intensity, the monitortyphoon travel direction and the speed, as well as the violent stormappears the area and so on, to prevented and reduces the typhoondisaster to play the key role. When the typhoon arrives offshore, butalso may use the radar to monitor the typhoon movement. Also has themeteorological observatory , according to each kind ofmaterial which obtained arrives, analysis typhoon trend, lands theplace and the time, promptly issued the typhoon forecast, the typhoontight newspaper or the urgent alarm, through the television, mediumand so on broadcast serve for the public, simultaneously provides thepolicy-making basis for all levels of governments, issued the typhoonforecast or the tight newspaper are reduces the typhoon disaster theimportant measure.
The typhoon origin, until now still was unable extremely todetermine, but known it is comes by the tropics atmosphere inperturbation development. On the tropics sea, the sea level because ofcauses the vertical incident solar rays the sea temperature toelevate, the sea water is easy to evaporate the water vapor to spreadin airborne, therefore on tropics sea air temperature high, humiditybig, this kind of air high inflates because of the temperature, causesthe density to reduce, the quality reduces, but nearby equator windpower weak, therefore is very easy to rise, has the convectioncurrent, simultaneously periphery the colder air inflow supplemented,then rises again, so moves in endless cycles, the end must entirecause for the temperature higher, the weight to be all lighter,a density smaller air, this has formed so-called "the tropicaldepression". However flowing of the air is the proud barometricpressure flows to the low atmospheric pressure, looks like is thewater flows to the low spot from the high place to be same, all aroundthe barometric pressure compares the high place the air to have tocompare the low spot to the barometric pressure to flow, but forms"the wind". In summer, because the vertical incident solar rays regionmoves by the equator to the north, causes of southeast trade crossingthe line the southern hemisphere to change the southwest monsoon toinvade Northern Hemisphere, meets one another with the originalNorthern Hemisphere's Northeast Tradewind, compels crowds this airrise, the increase convection current, again because the southwestmonsoon and the Northeast Tradewind direction is different, meets oneanother often creates the undulation and the whirlpool. This kind ofsouthwest monsoon and the Northeast Tradewind meet one another thespoke which creates to gather the function, with the originalconvection current continuously, causes to form continues for the lowatmospheric pressure whirlpool to deepen, when is causes all aroundthe air speeds up to the whirlpool center class, the inflow quickly,its wind speed is bigger; When the near ground most gale fast arrivesor surpasses each second 17.2 meters, we called it is the typhoon.
Saw from the typhoon structure, the so giant colossus, it producesmust meet the unique requirement.
First, must have broad high temperature, the humidity atmosphere. Thetropics on first floor atmosphere temperature and the humiditymainly decided to the sea level water temperature, the typhoon onlycan form Yu Haiwen is higher than 26 ℃ - 27 ℃ is warm on,moreover in 60 meters depths sea water water temperatures all must behigher than 26 ℃ - 27 ℃;
Second, must have the lower atmosphere high level to gather, theinitial perturbation to the central spoke which proliferates tooutside. Moreover the high level spoke disperses must surpass theunderlying bed spoke to gather, can maintain the enough ascendantcurrent, the underlying bed perturbation can unceasingly strengthen;
Third, the vertical direction wind speed cannot differ too in a bigway, on the lower level air relative motion is very small, can causeto dive the heat energy centralism preservation which in the initialperturbation the water vapor congeals releases in the area center, forms and strengthens the typhoon warm centerstructure
Fourth, must have the enough big place to transfer thefunction, the earth rotation function is advantageous to the cyclonevortex production. Transfers approaches nearby the equatorto zero, increases to the north and south two-pole, the typhoon occursprobably is leaving above the equator 5 latitudes on.
Typhoon preventing and controlling
Strengthens the typhoon the monitor and the forecast, isreduces the typhoon disaster the important measure. Mainly uses themeteorological satellite to the typhoon survey. In the satellite cloudchart, can clearly see the typhoon the existence and the size. Usingthe meteorological satellite material, may determine the center of atyphoon the position, estimated the typhoon intensity, the monitortyphoon travel direction and the speed, as well as the violent stormappears the area and so on, to prevented and reduces the typhoondisaster to play the key role. When the typhoon arrives offshore, butalso may use the radar to monitor the typhoon movement. Also has themeteorological observatory , according to each kind ofmaterial which obtained arrives, analysis typhoon trend, lands theplace and the time, promptly issued the typhoon forecast, the typhoontight newspaper or the urgent alarm, through the television, mediumand so on broadcast serve for the public, simultaneously provides thepolicy-making basis for all levels of governments, issued the typhoonforecast or the tight newspaper are reduces the typhoon disaster theimportant measure.
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