Deck 5: Atmospheric Water and Weather

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Question
Earth is properly characterized as

A) the land planet.
B) a small star.
C) the water planet.
D) lacking a hydrosphere.
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Question
Water molecules bind tightly to one another. This is a result of

A) hydrogen bonding.
B) covalent bonding.
C) atomic friction.
D) molecular hold.
Question
Water has a density of

A) 0.5 g/cm.
B) 1 g/cm.
C) 2.5 g/cm.
D) 15 g/cm.
Question
Other than ice sheets and glaciers, the largest repository of fresh water is located in

A) lakes and saline seas.
B) groundwater.
C) soil moisture storage.
D) rivers and streams.
Question
Which of the following is true of the distribution of land and water on Earth?

A) The Southern Hemisphere is dominated by water.
B) The Northern Hemisphere is dominated by water.
C) They are evenly distributed in both hemispheres.
D) Most of the water on Earth is fresh water.
Question
The present quantity of water on Earth was achieved approximately ________.

A) one million years ago
B) 500 million years ago
C) two billion years ago
D) 10,000 years ago (end of ice age)
Question
Earth's oceans possess

A) most of the fresh water on Earth.
B) about the same amount of water as is in the atmosphere.
C) fifty percent of Earth's waters.
D) ninety-seven percent of Earth's waters.
Question
Water covers some ________ of Earth's surface.

A) 50 percent
B) 90 percent
C) 25 percent
D) 71 percent
Question
When water freezes, its density

A) increases.
B) decreases.
C) remains the same as in the liquid state.
Question
Eustasy refers to

A) worldwide changes in land masses.
B) a steady-state equilibrium in the water system.
C) changes in water distribution related to the increase or decrease in quantities of ice.
D) worldwide changes in sea level.
Question
Which of the following is correct?

A) A person can survive for 8 to 12 days without food.
B) The human body is about 50 percent water by weight.
C) Humans can survive only 2 or 3 days without water.
D) Earth is covered some 50 percent by water.
Question
During the height of the last ice age, approximately 18,000 years ago, sea level

A) rose by a few hundred feet.
B) dropped by a few hundred feet.
C) remained constant.
Question
Surface tension and capillarity are the result of

A) hydrogen bonding between water molecules.
B) covalent bonding.
C) atomic friction.
D) molecular hold.
Question
Which is true regarding water in rivers, streams, and the atmosphere?

A) They contain 0.033 percent of the world's fresh water supply.
B) The total amount of water in these locations is equal to 14,250 km³ (3400 mi³).
C) On average, a water molecule travels through the hydrologic cycle in less than two weeks.
D) All of these are correct.
Question
Earth's water supply originated from

A) asteroids.
B) outgassing from within Earth.
C) gases expelled from the Sun, i.e., solar wind.
D) photosynthesis.
Question
Water is a good solvent because

A) it expands when it freezes.
B) it has an asymmetrical charge distribution (one end is positive and the other negative).
C) it undergoes phase changes over a relatively narrow range of temperatures.
D) it is transparent.
Question
If water behaved like other compounds,

A) icebergs would sink to the bottom of the oceans.
B) the whole iceberg would float just below the surface.
C) it would shrink as it cooled and froze.
D) all of the above
E) A and C only
Question
Water movement through the soil and water held in a straw above the surface of the liquid you are drinking result from a common phenomenon. What is this phenomenon?

A) barometric pressure
B) surface tension
C) capillarity
D) vacuum suction
Question
The largest portion of  fresh \underline { \text { fresh } } water today is located in

A) clouds.
B) groundwater resources.
C) ice caps and glaciers.
D) the major rivers and lakes of the world.
Question
The term deposition refers to

A) water freezing to ice.
B) ice melting to water.
C) vapor condensing into liquid.
D) water vapor freezing to ice.
Question
Which of the following is used to measure relative humidity?

A) wet and dry barometers
B) a damp piece of paper
C) instruments using human hair, or wet and dry bulb thermometers
Question
What is the heat energy involved in the change of state, or phase, in water?

A) mechanical heat
B) sensible heat
C) fusion heat
D) latent heat
Question
In order to melt  two \underline { \text { two } } grams of ice, how many calories of heat energy must be added to the ice during its phase change? (specific heat of water = 1 cal/gm; heat of fusion = 85 cal/gm)
(heat of vaporization = 585 cal/gm; heat of sublimation = 670 cal/gm)

A) 2
B) 170
C) 172
D) 1170
E) 1340
Question
When water condenses, it ________ heat energy and ________ the surrounding air.

A) absorbs; cools
B) absorbs; heats
C) releases; cools
D) releases; heats
Question
A mass of air always becomes saturated when it reaches the

A) highest temperature of the day.
B) lowest temperature of the day.
C) specific humidity point.
D) dew-point temperature.
Question
Water vapor in the atmosphere is called

A) water.
B) deposition.
C) sublimation.
D) humidity.
Question
When water evaporates, it ________ heat energy and ________ the surrounding air.

A) absorbs; cools
B) absorbs heats
C) releases; cools
D) releases; heats
Question
Relative humidity is

A) the amount of water vapor in the air compared to the normal amount.
B) the amount of moisture in the air relative to your own sensible feelings.
C) the amount of water vapor in the air at a given temperature expressed as a percentage of the moisture capacity of the air.
D) a basically unused concept when it comes to weather topics.
Question
The greater the difference in temperature between the wet bulb and dry bulb on a sling psychrometer, the ________ the air is and the ________ the relative humidity.

A) drier; higher
B) drier; lower
C) wetter; higher
D) wetter; lower
Question
Which of the following is true regarding the evaporation of water?

A) The phase change involves the latent heat of sublimation.
B) The phase change involves the latent heat of evaporation.
C) The phase change involves the latent heat of deposition.
D) The phase change involves the sensible heat of vaporization
Question
The elevation at which the bottoms of clouds begin to form represents the elevation at which

A) dew point occurs.
B) relative humidity reaches 100 percent.
C) absolute humidity reaches 100 percent.
D) both A and B
E) both A and C
Question
The capacity of the air to hold water vapor is basically a function of

A) the temperature of both the water vapor and the air.
B) the water vapor content.
C) freezing temperature.
D) latent heat.
Question
In winter, freezing water can break pipes and even crack engine blocks. Why does this happen?

A) Water expands in volume as it freezes in response to hydrogen bonding.
B) Ice is denser than water.
C) Water contracts as it cools and freezes.
D) It occurs because of the latent heat of fusion.
Question
When frost forms, it

A) warms the air by releasing 680 calories of heat energy to the air per gram of water.
B) warms the air by releasing 80 calories of heat energy to the air per gram of water.
C) cools the air by releasing 680 calories of heat energy to the air per gram of water.
D) cools the air by releasing 80 calories of heat energy to the air per gram of water.
Question
Both the latent heat of melting (heat of fusion) and the latent heat of freezing involve the absorption or release of ________ calories per gram of water changing state.

A) 80
B) 100
C) 540
D) 585
Question
The process of sublimation in the atmosphere produces

A) fog.
B) freezing rain.
C) snowflakes.
D) sleet.
Question
Most of the precipitation and evaporation on Earth takes place over the

A) land masses.
B) oceans.
C) poles of the planet.
D) ice caps and glaciers combined.
Question
A humidity measure that remains constant as temperature and pressure change, and which is expressed as a mass of water vapor per mass (g/kg) of air, is

A) specific humidity.
B) vapor pressure.
C) relative humidity.
D) the dew-point.
Question
Which of the following phase changes involves the greatest number of calories?

A) melting
B) evaporation
C) sublimation
D) condensation
Question
As temperature increases during the day, relative humidity usually

A) increases.
B) decreases.
C) remains the same.
Question
All adiabatic temperature changes occur as a result of

A) the addition or removal of heat energy from the air.
B) changes in the absolute humidity of the air.
C) expansion or compression of the air.
Question
Air that is not saturated will cool or heat at a rate of ________ as it rises or descends, respectively.

A) 10C degrees per 1000 m (5.5F degrees per 1000 ft)
B) 6C degrees per 1000 m (3.3F degrees per 1000 ft)
C) 6.4C degrees per 1000 m (3.5F degrees per 1000 ft)
Question
The condensation process requires

A) dew-point temperatures alone.
B) condensation nuclei and saturated air.
C) moisture droplets.
D) condensation nuclei alone.
Question
Which of the following is true regarding cirrostratus clouds?

A) They look like patches of cotton balls, or cotton balls arranged in lines.
B) The sun's outline is just visible through these clouds.
C) They form a veil of ice crystals that creates a halo around the Moon.
D) They are sharply outlined, and billowy.
Question
An air parcel is considered  unstable \underline {\text { unstable }} when it

A) either remains as it is, or changes its initial position.
B) continues to rise until it reaches an altitude at which the surrounding air has a similar density.
C) resists displacement upward.
D) ceases to ascend.
Question
Which of the following are correctly matched?

A) flat or layered clouds - cumulus
B) puffy or globular clouds - cirroform
C) puffy or globular clouds - cumuliform
D) wispy clouds - water droplets
Question
A dry air parcel that is rising because of heat energy derived from the surface is

A) stable.
B) unstable.
C) conditionally unstable.
Question
Which type of cloud would dominate the weather in a region of tropical rain forests?

A) cirrus
B) altostratus
C) cumulonimbus
D) cirrocumulus
Question
Which of the following is a middle-level cloud type?

A) cirrostratus
B) stratocumulus
C) cumulonimbus
D) altostratus
Question
As air sinks\underline { sinks } down the leeward side of a mountain, it will move into a region of ________ air pressure and will therefore be ________ by compression.

A) higher; heated
B) higher; cooled
C) lower; heated
D) lower; cooled
Question
Florida has the highest thunderstorm frequency in the U.S. because

A) the Florida peninsula heats to high temperatures during the day.
B) mT air masses surround the peninsula.
C) frequent, strong cold fronts occur in the Florida area.
D) all of the above
E) A and B only
Question
Areas between 25 degrees to 35 degrees latitude usually become ________ because this area is dominated by air that is sinking and being ________.

A) deserts; cooled by expansion
B) deserts; heated by compression
C) rain forests; cooled by expansion
D) rain forests; heated by compression
Question
The general term that refers to the tendency of a parcel of air to either remain in place or change its initial position is ________.

A) adiabatic
B) stability
C) conditional instability
D) stasis
Question
When the environmental lapse rate is between the dry and moist adiabatic lapse rates conditions are described as

A) adiabatic.
B) stable.
C) conditionally unstable.
D) unstable.
Question
The wet adiabatic rate is ________ than the dry adiabatic rate because ________.

A) greater; condensation heats the air
B) greater; condensation cools the air
C) less; condensation heats the air
D) less; condensation cools the air
Question
Clouds that have vertical development and produce precipitation are called

A) stratocumulus.
B) cumulonimbus.
C) nimbostratus.
D) cumulus.
Question
Which of the following normally would be true of the humidity above the tropical rain forests of the world?

A) The specific humidity would be high.
B) The relative humidity would be high.
C) The saturation vapor pressure would be high.
D) All of these are true.
E) None of these are true.
Question
Assume a warm air parcel at Earth's surface has a temperature of 21 degrees C (70 degrees F) and begins to rise upward. Assume it becomes saturated at 1000 m (3300 ft) altitude, and continues to rise to 2000 m (6600 ft) altitude. What would the approximate temperature of the parcel be at an elevation of 2000 m (6600 ft)?

A) 7 degrees C (44.6 degrees F)
B) 8 degrees C (46.4 degrees F)
C) 9 degrees C (48.2 degrees F)
D) 5 degrees C (41.0 degrees F)
Question
Which cloud type is specifically a good indicator of an arriving storm, say within the next 24 hours?

A) fog
B) cumulus
C) stratocumulus
D) cirrus
Question
An individual raindrop consists of approximately ________ moisture droplets.

A) 2
B) 100
C) 1 million
D) 1 trillion
Question
With respect to the three main lifting (cooling) mechanisms (local heating, orographic, and frontal), which of the following is correct?

A) The greatest average annual rainfall on Earth is due to local heating and frontal activity.
B) A single convectional storm triggered by local heating affects large geographical regions.
C) We do not get all three mechanisms within the United States.
D) Given the necessary physical requirements, orographic precipitation is usually the most consistent type of the three.
Question
Which of the following is true regarding air masses?

A) An air mass always retains the characteristics of its source region.
B) They are homogenous in terms of temperature and humidity.
C) They extend to the bottom of the stratosphere.
D) They are classified based on their latitude.
Question
The transition from the Ice Age to the present warm conditions can best be considered an example of

A) a change in weather.
B) a change in climate.
C) changes in the midlatitude wave-cyclone cycle.
D) transition from a cold front to a warm front.
Question
Cooling of a surface overnight that chills the air layer directly above that surface may form

A) an advection fog.
B) an upslope fog.
C) an evaporation fog.
D) a radiation fog.
Question
Which type of cloud would you most likely see on a regular basis in a subtropical desert during the summer?

A) nimbostratus
B) cirrus
C) cumulonimbus
D) altostratus
Question
Which of the following would result in the modification of the air mass?

A) A mT air mass moving across Texas.
B) A cP air mass moving across the Great Lakes.
C) A cT air mass moving across the Gulf of Mexico.
D) An cA air mass moving across the Gulf of Alaska.
E) all of the above
Question
Lake effect snow involves

A) heavy snowfall on the leeward shores of Great Lakes.
B) heavy snowfall on the windward shores of the Great Lakes.
C) cP and cA air masses being humidified and warmed by the Great Lakes.
D) A and C only
E) all of the above
Question
Weather is

A) the climate of a region.
B) the short-term condition of the atmosphere.
C) the long-term atmospheric condition, including extremes that may occur.
D) a reference to temperature patterns only.
Question
Which is false regarding weather-related damage?

A) The cost has increased 500% during the last 20 years.
B) The cost has reached $10 billion annually.
C) The damage has never exceeded $90 billion worldwide.
D) Damage from just Hurricane Katrina will exceed $130 Billion.
Question
A radiation fog is most likely to develop when

A) the nighttime air is very warm.
B) the sky is full of stratus clouds.
C) the sky is clear.
D) both A and B
E) both B and C
Question
Which of the following is incorrectly matched?

A) fog - a stratus cloud that is high in elevation off the ground
B) cP - coldest weather conditions in the Midwest
C) precipitation - rain, sleet, snow, hail
D) cloud droplets - condensation nuclei and water
Question
Air masses that develop over Canada are examples of ________ air masses.

A) mT
B) mP
C) cT
D) cP
Question
A fog that develops when warm, moist air blows over a cold current (such as the California Current) is an example of ________ fog.

A) radiation
B) convection
C) advection
D) evaporation
Question
Which of the following pressure systems reside within the source region for mP air masses?

A) Bermuda high and Pacific high
B) Aleutian low and Icelandic low
C) Bermuda high and Icelandic low
D) Aleutian low and Pacific high
Question
On cool spring mornings, veils of fog can often be seen rising above warm lakes and ponds. This type fog is an example of ________ fog.

A) radiation
B) convection
C) advection
D) evaporation
Question
Over the last two decades, costs for weather-related destruction has, on an annual basis,

A) decreased.
B) increased two-fold.
C) increased five-fold.
D) stayed about the same.
Question
The scientific study of the atmosphere is

A) weather.
B) climate.
C) meteorology.
D) geography.
Question
A mT air mass is likely to be ________ than a cT air mass because the mT air mass ________.

A) wetter; is warmer than the cT air mass
B) wetter; forms over the ocean
C) drier; is a cold air mass
D) drier; forms under the equatorial low
E) hotter; forms over the ocean
Question
A well-developed, newly formed cP air mass would have which of the following characteristics?

A) cold temperatures
B) clear skies
C) high pressure
D) all of the above
E) none of the above
Question
Fog often lingers in river valleys because

A) the water in the river cools off faster at night than the land does.
B) cold air sinks into low areas such as river valleys.
C) some evaporation may occur from the river, thereby supplying moisture to the cooler atmosphere.
D) both A and B
E) both B and C
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Deck 5: Atmospheric Water and Weather
1
Earth is properly characterized as

A) the land planet.
B) a small star.
C) the water planet.
D) lacking a hydrosphere.
C
2
Water molecules bind tightly to one another. This is a result of

A) hydrogen bonding.
B) covalent bonding.
C) atomic friction.
D) molecular hold.
A
3
Water has a density of

A) 0.5 g/cm.
B) 1 g/cm.
C) 2.5 g/cm.
D) 15 g/cm.
B
4
Other than ice sheets and glaciers, the largest repository of fresh water is located in

A) lakes and saline seas.
B) groundwater.
C) soil moisture storage.
D) rivers and streams.
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5
Which of the following is true of the distribution of land and water on Earth?

A) The Southern Hemisphere is dominated by water.
B) The Northern Hemisphere is dominated by water.
C) They are evenly distributed in both hemispheres.
D) Most of the water on Earth is fresh water.
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6
The present quantity of water on Earth was achieved approximately ________.

A) one million years ago
B) 500 million years ago
C) two billion years ago
D) 10,000 years ago (end of ice age)
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7
Earth's oceans possess

A) most of the fresh water on Earth.
B) about the same amount of water as is in the atmosphere.
C) fifty percent of Earth's waters.
D) ninety-seven percent of Earth's waters.
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8
Water covers some ________ of Earth's surface.

A) 50 percent
B) 90 percent
C) 25 percent
D) 71 percent
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9
When water freezes, its density

A) increases.
B) decreases.
C) remains the same as in the liquid state.
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10
Eustasy refers to

A) worldwide changes in land masses.
B) a steady-state equilibrium in the water system.
C) changes in water distribution related to the increase or decrease in quantities of ice.
D) worldwide changes in sea level.
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11
Which of the following is correct?

A) A person can survive for 8 to 12 days without food.
B) The human body is about 50 percent water by weight.
C) Humans can survive only 2 or 3 days without water.
D) Earth is covered some 50 percent by water.
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12
During the height of the last ice age, approximately 18,000 years ago, sea level

A) rose by a few hundred feet.
B) dropped by a few hundred feet.
C) remained constant.
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13
Surface tension and capillarity are the result of

A) hydrogen bonding between water molecules.
B) covalent bonding.
C) atomic friction.
D) molecular hold.
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14
Which is true regarding water in rivers, streams, and the atmosphere?

A) They contain 0.033 percent of the world's fresh water supply.
B) The total amount of water in these locations is equal to 14,250 km³ (3400 mi³).
C) On average, a water molecule travels through the hydrologic cycle in less than two weeks.
D) All of these are correct.
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15
Earth's water supply originated from

A) asteroids.
B) outgassing from within Earth.
C) gases expelled from the Sun, i.e., solar wind.
D) photosynthesis.
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16
Water is a good solvent because

A) it expands when it freezes.
B) it has an asymmetrical charge distribution (one end is positive and the other negative).
C) it undergoes phase changes over a relatively narrow range of temperatures.
D) it is transparent.
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17
If water behaved like other compounds,

A) icebergs would sink to the bottom of the oceans.
B) the whole iceberg would float just below the surface.
C) it would shrink as it cooled and froze.
D) all of the above
E) A and C only
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18
Water movement through the soil and water held in a straw above the surface of the liquid you are drinking result from a common phenomenon. What is this phenomenon?

A) barometric pressure
B) surface tension
C) capillarity
D) vacuum suction
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19
The largest portion of  fresh \underline { \text { fresh } } water today is located in

A) clouds.
B) groundwater resources.
C) ice caps and glaciers.
D) the major rivers and lakes of the world.
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20
The term deposition refers to

A) water freezing to ice.
B) ice melting to water.
C) vapor condensing into liquid.
D) water vapor freezing to ice.
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21
Which of the following is used to measure relative humidity?

A) wet and dry barometers
B) a damp piece of paper
C) instruments using human hair, or wet and dry bulb thermometers
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22
What is the heat energy involved in the change of state, or phase, in water?

A) mechanical heat
B) sensible heat
C) fusion heat
D) latent heat
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23
In order to melt  two \underline { \text { two } } grams of ice, how many calories of heat energy must be added to the ice during its phase change? (specific heat of water = 1 cal/gm; heat of fusion = 85 cal/gm)
(heat of vaporization = 585 cal/gm; heat of sublimation = 670 cal/gm)

A) 2
B) 170
C) 172
D) 1170
E) 1340
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24
When water condenses, it ________ heat energy and ________ the surrounding air.

A) absorbs; cools
B) absorbs; heats
C) releases; cools
D) releases; heats
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25
A mass of air always becomes saturated when it reaches the

A) highest temperature of the day.
B) lowest temperature of the day.
C) specific humidity point.
D) dew-point temperature.
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26
Water vapor in the atmosphere is called

A) water.
B) deposition.
C) sublimation.
D) humidity.
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27
When water evaporates, it ________ heat energy and ________ the surrounding air.

A) absorbs; cools
B) absorbs heats
C) releases; cools
D) releases; heats
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28
Relative humidity is

A) the amount of water vapor in the air compared to the normal amount.
B) the amount of moisture in the air relative to your own sensible feelings.
C) the amount of water vapor in the air at a given temperature expressed as a percentage of the moisture capacity of the air.
D) a basically unused concept when it comes to weather topics.
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29
The greater the difference in temperature between the wet bulb and dry bulb on a sling psychrometer, the ________ the air is and the ________ the relative humidity.

A) drier; higher
B) drier; lower
C) wetter; higher
D) wetter; lower
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30
Which of the following is true regarding the evaporation of water?

A) The phase change involves the latent heat of sublimation.
B) The phase change involves the latent heat of evaporation.
C) The phase change involves the latent heat of deposition.
D) The phase change involves the sensible heat of vaporization
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31
The elevation at which the bottoms of clouds begin to form represents the elevation at which

A) dew point occurs.
B) relative humidity reaches 100 percent.
C) absolute humidity reaches 100 percent.
D) both A and B
E) both A and C
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32
The capacity of the air to hold water vapor is basically a function of

A) the temperature of both the water vapor and the air.
B) the water vapor content.
C) freezing temperature.
D) latent heat.
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33
In winter, freezing water can break pipes and even crack engine blocks. Why does this happen?

A) Water expands in volume as it freezes in response to hydrogen bonding.
B) Ice is denser than water.
C) Water contracts as it cools and freezes.
D) It occurs because of the latent heat of fusion.
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k this deck
34
When frost forms, it

A) warms the air by releasing 680 calories of heat energy to the air per gram of water.
B) warms the air by releasing 80 calories of heat energy to the air per gram of water.
C) cools the air by releasing 680 calories of heat energy to the air per gram of water.
D) cools the air by releasing 80 calories of heat energy to the air per gram of water.
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35
Both the latent heat of melting (heat of fusion) and the latent heat of freezing involve the absorption or release of ________ calories per gram of water changing state.

A) 80
B) 100
C) 540
D) 585
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36
The process of sublimation in the atmosphere produces

A) fog.
B) freezing rain.
C) snowflakes.
D) sleet.
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37
Most of the precipitation and evaporation on Earth takes place over the

A) land masses.
B) oceans.
C) poles of the planet.
D) ice caps and glaciers combined.
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38
A humidity measure that remains constant as temperature and pressure change, and which is expressed as a mass of water vapor per mass (g/kg) of air, is

A) specific humidity.
B) vapor pressure.
C) relative humidity.
D) the dew-point.
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39
Which of the following phase changes involves the greatest number of calories?

A) melting
B) evaporation
C) sublimation
D) condensation
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40
As temperature increases during the day, relative humidity usually

A) increases.
B) decreases.
C) remains the same.
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41
All adiabatic temperature changes occur as a result of

A) the addition or removal of heat energy from the air.
B) changes in the absolute humidity of the air.
C) expansion or compression of the air.
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42
Air that is not saturated will cool or heat at a rate of ________ as it rises or descends, respectively.

A) 10C degrees per 1000 m (5.5F degrees per 1000 ft)
B) 6C degrees per 1000 m (3.3F degrees per 1000 ft)
C) 6.4C degrees per 1000 m (3.5F degrees per 1000 ft)
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43
The condensation process requires

A) dew-point temperatures alone.
B) condensation nuclei and saturated air.
C) moisture droplets.
D) condensation nuclei alone.
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44
Which of the following is true regarding cirrostratus clouds?

A) They look like patches of cotton balls, or cotton balls arranged in lines.
B) The sun's outline is just visible through these clouds.
C) They form a veil of ice crystals that creates a halo around the Moon.
D) They are sharply outlined, and billowy.
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45
An air parcel is considered  unstable \underline {\text { unstable }} when it

A) either remains as it is, or changes its initial position.
B) continues to rise until it reaches an altitude at which the surrounding air has a similar density.
C) resists displacement upward.
D) ceases to ascend.
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46
Which of the following are correctly matched?

A) flat or layered clouds - cumulus
B) puffy or globular clouds - cirroform
C) puffy or globular clouds - cumuliform
D) wispy clouds - water droplets
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47
A dry air parcel that is rising because of heat energy derived from the surface is

A) stable.
B) unstable.
C) conditionally unstable.
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48
Which type of cloud would dominate the weather in a region of tropical rain forests?

A) cirrus
B) altostratus
C) cumulonimbus
D) cirrocumulus
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49
Which of the following is a middle-level cloud type?

A) cirrostratus
B) stratocumulus
C) cumulonimbus
D) altostratus
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50
As air sinks\underline { sinks } down the leeward side of a mountain, it will move into a region of ________ air pressure and will therefore be ________ by compression.

A) higher; heated
B) higher; cooled
C) lower; heated
D) lower; cooled
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51
Florida has the highest thunderstorm frequency in the U.S. because

A) the Florida peninsula heats to high temperatures during the day.
B) mT air masses surround the peninsula.
C) frequent, strong cold fronts occur in the Florida area.
D) all of the above
E) A and B only
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52
Areas between 25 degrees to 35 degrees latitude usually become ________ because this area is dominated by air that is sinking and being ________.

A) deserts; cooled by expansion
B) deserts; heated by compression
C) rain forests; cooled by expansion
D) rain forests; heated by compression
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53
The general term that refers to the tendency of a parcel of air to either remain in place or change its initial position is ________.

A) adiabatic
B) stability
C) conditional instability
D) stasis
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54
When the environmental lapse rate is between the dry and moist adiabatic lapse rates conditions are described as

A) adiabatic.
B) stable.
C) conditionally unstable.
D) unstable.
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55
The wet adiabatic rate is ________ than the dry adiabatic rate because ________.

A) greater; condensation heats the air
B) greater; condensation cools the air
C) less; condensation heats the air
D) less; condensation cools the air
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56
Clouds that have vertical development and produce precipitation are called

A) stratocumulus.
B) cumulonimbus.
C) nimbostratus.
D) cumulus.
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57
Which of the following normally would be true of the humidity above the tropical rain forests of the world?

A) The specific humidity would be high.
B) The relative humidity would be high.
C) The saturation vapor pressure would be high.
D) All of these are true.
E) None of these are true.
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58
Assume a warm air parcel at Earth's surface has a temperature of 21 degrees C (70 degrees F) and begins to rise upward. Assume it becomes saturated at 1000 m (3300 ft) altitude, and continues to rise to 2000 m (6600 ft) altitude. What would the approximate temperature of the parcel be at an elevation of 2000 m (6600 ft)?

A) 7 degrees C (44.6 degrees F)
B) 8 degrees C (46.4 degrees F)
C) 9 degrees C (48.2 degrees F)
D) 5 degrees C (41.0 degrees F)
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59
Which cloud type is specifically a good indicator of an arriving storm, say within the next 24 hours?

A) fog
B) cumulus
C) stratocumulus
D) cirrus
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60
An individual raindrop consists of approximately ________ moisture droplets.

A) 2
B) 100
C) 1 million
D) 1 trillion
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61
With respect to the three main lifting (cooling) mechanisms (local heating, orographic, and frontal), which of the following is correct?

A) The greatest average annual rainfall on Earth is due to local heating and frontal activity.
B) A single convectional storm triggered by local heating affects large geographical regions.
C) We do not get all three mechanisms within the United States.
D) Given the necessary physical requirements, orographic precipitation is usually the most consistent type of the three.
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62
Which of the following is true regarding air masses?

A) An air mass always retains the characteristics of its source region.
B) They are homogenous in terms of temperature and humidity.
C) They extend to the bottom of the stratosphere.
D) They are classified based on their latitude.
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63
The transition from the Ice Age to the present warm conditions can best be considered an example of

A) a change in weather.
B) a change in climate.
C) changes in the midlatitude wave-cyclone cycle.
D) transition from a cold front to a warm front.
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64
Cooling of a surface overnight that chills the air layer directly above that surface may form

A) an advection fog.
B) an upslope fog.
C) an evaporation fog.
D) a radiation fog.
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65
Which type of cloud would you most likely see on a regular basis in a subtropical desert during the summer?

A) nimbostratus
B) cirrus
C) cumulonimbus
D) altostratus
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66
Which of the following would result in the modification of the air mass?

A) A mT air mass moving across Texas.
B) A cP air mass moving across the Great Lakes.
C) A cT air mass moving across the Gulf of Mexico.
D) An cA air mass moving across the Gulf of Alaska.
E) all of the above
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67
Lake effect snow involves

A) heavy snowfall on the leeward shores of Great Lakes.
B) heavy snowfall on the windward shores of the Great Lakes.
C) cP and cA air masses being humidified and warmed by the Great Lakes.
D) A and C only
E) all of the above
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68
Weather is

A) the climate of a region.
B) the short-term condition of the atmosphere.
C) the long-term atmospheric condition, including extremes that may occur.
D) a reference to temperature patterns only.
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69
Which is false regarding weather-related damage?

A) The cost has increased 500% during the last 20 years.
B) The cost has reached $10 billion annually.
C) The damage has never exceeded $90 billion worldwide.
D) Damage from just Hurricane Katrina will exceed $130 Billion.
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70
A radiation fog is most likely to develop when

A) the nighttime air is very warm.
B) the sky is full of stratus clouds.
C) the sky is clear.
D) both A and B
E) both B and C
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71
Which of the following is incorrectly matched?

A) fog - a stratus cloud that is high in elevation off the ground
B) cP - coldest weather conditions in the Midwest
C) precipitation - rain, sleet, snow, hail
D) cloud droplets - condensation nuclei and water
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72
Air masses that develop over Canada are examples of ________ air masses.

A) mT
B) mP
C) cT
D) cP
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73
A fog that develops when warm, moist air blows over a cold current (such as the California Current) is an example of ________ fog.

A) radiation
B) convection
C) advection
D) evaporation
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74
Which of the following pressure systems reside within the source region for mP air masses?

A) Bermuda high and Pacific high
B) Aleutian low and Icelandic low
C) Bermuda high and Icelandic low
D) Aleutian low and Pacific high
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75
On cool spring mornings, veils of fog can often be seen rising above warm lakes and ponds. This type fog is an example of ________ fog.

A) radiation
B) convection
C) advection
D) evaporation
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76
Over the last two decades, costs for weather-related destruction has, on an annual basis,

A) decreased.
B) increased two-fold.
C) increased five-fold.
D) stayed about the same.
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77
The scientific study of the atmosphere is

A) weather.
B) climate.
C) meteorology.
D) geography.
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78
A mT air mass is likely to be ________ than a cT air mass because the mT air mass ________.

A) wetter; is warmer than the cT air mass
B) wetter; forms over the ocean
C) drier; is a cold air mass
D) drier; forms under the equatorial low
E) hotter; forms over the ocean
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79
A well-developed, newly formed cP air mass would have which of the following characteristics?

A) cold temperatures
B) clear skies
C) high pressure
D) all of the above
E) none of the above
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80
Fog often lingers in river valleys because

A) the water in the river cools off faster at night than the land does.
B) cold air sinks into low areas such as river valleys.
C) some evaporation may occur from the river, thereby supplying moisture to the cooler atmosphere.
D) both A and B
E) both B and C
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