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7.1: Surface vs Aloft

  • Page ID
    40381
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    Surface weather vs upper air weather

    Winds and weather occur at all heights in our Troposphere. Meteorologists are not only interested in weather conditions at the Earth's surface, but also at various altitudes above it. This is because weather conditions at those heights can greatly influence weather conditions at the surface. In this investigation and in the next one, you are going to encounter the words “Surface” and “Aloft” quite a bit. But what do they mean? While weather conditions can be measured at various altitudes in the atmosphere, the terms surface and aloft exist primarily to present a dichotomy. Here are their definitions:

    • Surface: The portion of the atmosphere directly above the land/ocean surface of Earth..
    • Aloft: The portion of the atmosphere at any height above the surface, or higher than 1000 meters. 1000 meters is an arbitrary height used by meteorologists to separate surface from weather conditions aloft.

     Using this information, let's try to answer the following questions:

    1. Weather stations near the ground (Figure \(\PageIndex{1}\)) record weather conditions:
      1. At the surface
      2. Aloft   
    An automated ground weather station.
    Figure \(\PageIndex{1}\): The Automated Observing System (ASOS) at Sussex Airport in New Jersey. Instruments include a wind anemometer, a precipitation gauge, radiation sensors, and a radio transmitter. (CC BY-SA 4.0; Famartin via Wikimedia Commons)
      After being released, weather balloons (Figure \(\PageIndex{2}\)) record weather conditions:
      1. At the surface
      2. Aloft  
    A weather balloon flying through the air.
    Figure \(\PageIndex{2}\): A launched Weather Balloon with an attached radiosonde. (Public Domain; Carla Thomas via NASA).

    7.1: Surface vs Aloft is shared under a CC BY 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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