Atmosphere
Pressure and Altitude
Clouds, Atmosphere Stability
Turb/Icing/Thunderstorm
Fog/Jet Stream
100

Where is the tropopause the thickest - the poles or the equator?

THICCCCEST - EQUATOR 55k-60k

mid latitudes - 35k-40k

thin - poles 25k-30k

100

How does pressure vary with altitude?

Pressure decreases as altitude increases. In the standard atmosphere the rate of decrease is 1 inch Hg per 1,000 feet

100

What is the dew point?

The temperature at which air reaches water vapor saturation

100

What is CAT?

Turbulence not associated with clouds. Occurs at high altitudes near the jet stream

100

How might an inversion affect visibility?

Inversions create a capping effect, trapping haze, fog, or smog near the surface

200

What is the standard lapse rate? 

The rate at which temperature changes with changes in altitude per the standard atmosphere. 


2 degrees Celsius per 1,000 feet

200

What is Coriolis force?

Phenomenon that occurs due to the rotation of the Earth that causes wind in the Northern Hemisphere to be deflected to the right. 

200

What is the significance of virga? 

It is precipitation that evaporates before it reaches the ground. 

associated with turbulence/unstable conditions

200

What is a squall line?

A squall line is a line of severe thunderstorms forming ahead typically of a fast moving cold front

200

What is the tropopause?

Division between troposphere and stratosphere marked by a dramatic lapse rate change or the temperature stops changing as alt increases. 

300

What effect does temperature have on aircraft performance? 

As temperature increases, aircraft performance is REDUCED due to a decrease in air density.

300

Define isobar

Define trough

Define ridge


Isobar: A line of equal pressure


Trough: Elongated area of low pressure

Ridge: elongated area of high pressure


300

As air expands....

temperature decreases

300

What is a microburst?

A concentrated area of wind shear that flows downward and outward from a strong thunderstorm. Should be avoided at all times

300

What is the jet stream?





Narrow band of strong wind, over 50kts, occuring in the upper atmosphere

Where the tropopause changes altitude dramatically over a short distance the jet stream can be here and (turbulence)

400

What potential might arise when an inversion exists at an airport?

reduces visibility

wind shear at the inversion layer

400

What is katabatic wind?

Wind flowing along an inclined surface. Common in mountainous areas caused by cold, dense air rapidly sinking downwards along the sloping terrain. 

400

What is a "front"

A division line between two airmasses with different attributes. Occurring when CF cold air is pushing against warmer air or vice versa WF
400
How far must an aircraft deviate around or above a storm to stay safe?

At least 20NM around and at least 1,000 feet per 10kts of wind above the cloud tops

400

CAT can be produced by jet stream winds in excess of ____ kts or more

100

500

What is the difference between pressure and density altitude? 

Pressure: altitude above the standard datum plane (altimeter set to 29.92), read the altitude shown

Density: pressure altitude corrected for temperature and humidity - directly affecting aircraft performance

500

Define "wind shear"

Rapid shift in wind speed or direction

500

What is a dry line front?

Common in Texas, dry area from west desert impinges on moist air from the Gulf. Can produce thunderstorms

dry line vs cold and warm fronts

cold/warm vary between temperature

dry line is differing moisture contents

500

What are the three types of icing?

What clouds are they found in? 

How does an aircraft deviate from them?

Clear, Mixed, Rime

Rime in stratus clouds, Clear in cumulus clouds

Deviate on a new route to escape Clear

Deviate at a new altitude to escape Rime

500

Is icing typically a concern at high altitudes?

No, clouds in upper levels of the atmosphere are made of ice crystals