Lifted condensation level

Lifted condensation level

The lifted condensation level or lifting condensation level (LCL), represents the height at which an air parcel being lifted dry adiabatically will become saturated because of adiabatic cooling (caused by expansion) and condense into cloud. It approximates the height of cloud base when there is mechanical forcing.

Method of finding

Meteorologists determine the LCL on thermodynamic diagrams, such as a Skew-T log-P diagram or the Tephigram, as follows:

# Start at the initial temperature (T) and pressure of the parcel and follow upward the dry adiabatic lapse rate line if the air is not saturated. Otherwise, the parcel is already at or above LCL.
# From the dew point temperature (Td) of the parcel, follow upward the mixing ratio line at that point.
# At the intersection of the two lines is the LCL.

While the potential temperature of the parcel remains the same, as it is done adiabatically (no exchange of heat with the environment), the volume expands due to a lower outside pressure. This leads to a lowering of the parcel temperature to compensate (ideal gas law). Since the air parcel does not lose matter either, the mixing ratio of water vapor to dry air remain the same until the temperature has reached the saturation. Then condensation occurs, and if the lift continues the parcel will form cloud.

More simply, as an air parcel rises, its temperature decreases while its moisture content remains constant, eventually reaching the point of saturation. It is the point where the temperature and dew point are equivalent, where relative humidity is 100%.

The LCL is the level where a parcel rising dry adiabatically from the surface (the mixed layer and boundary layer) intersects the saturation mixing ratio line from the surface dew point. A lesser dew point depression (T-Td) results in a lower LCL. High low-level moisture content and low cloud bases are conducive to tornadogenesis. One can approximate the LCL without a sounding, using surface data, with the following formula:

: "h"LCL = 120 ("T" - Td)

where "h" is pressure height of LCL, "T" is temperature in degrees Fahrenheit, "Td" is dew point temperature in degrees Fahrenheit.

Relation with CCL

Without mechanical lift, cloud will form at the convective condensation level (CCL) resultant from surface heating causing buoyant lifting spontaneously to the point of saturation when the convective temperature is reached. The CCL is always higher than the LCL, unless the convective temperature is reached, then the heights are the same. This assumes idealized conditions using parcel theory, in nature, the actual cloud base is usually initially somewhere between the LCL and the CCL. This is partly because often both processes are at work lifting a parcel. As a thunderstorm grows and matures, processes (increased saturation at lower levels from precipitation and lower pressure) usually lead to a lowering of the cloud base.

A lower difference between the LCL and LFC (LCL-LFC) is conducive to thunderstorms and tornadoes. One reason for this is that a parcel requires less work and time to pass through the layer of convective inhibition (CIN) to reach its level of free convection (LFC), where after, deep, moist convection (DMC) ensues and a parcel buoyantly rises in the positive area of the sounding consisting of convective available potential energy (CAPE) until reaching the equilibrium level (EL). A lower LCL-LFC difference also means thunderstorms can initiate sooner, requiring less lift, since they'll reach their LFC more quickly and easily.

See also

* Atmospheric thermodynamics

References

* M K Yau and R.R. Rogers, "Short Course in Cloud Physics, Third Edition", published by Butterworth-Heinemann, January 1, 1989, 304 pages. EAN 9780750632157 ISBN 0-7506-3215-1

External links

* [http://theweatherprediction.com/habyhints/299/ LCL tutorial]
* [http://theweatherprediction.com/habyhints/307/ SKEW-T: A LOOK AT SBLCL ]
* [http://amsglossary.allenpress.com/glossary/search?id=lifting-condensation-level1 Lifting condensation level (LCL)] (Glossary of Meteorology)


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно сделать НИР?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Convective condensation level — The convective condensation level (CCL) represents the height where an air parcel becomes saturated when lifted adiabatically to achieve buoyant ascent. It marks where cloud base begins when air is heated from below to the convective temperature …   Wikipedia

  • condensation level — The height at which a rising parcel of air would become saturated if it were lifted adiabatically (i.e., without heat being given or taken out from the parcel of air) …   Aviation dictionary

  • lifting condensation level — The level at which a parcel of unsaturated dry air lifted dry adiabatically becomes saturated. See also dry adiabatic lapse rate and adiabatic …   Aviation dictionary

  • Level of free convection — The level of free convection (LFC) is the altitude in the atmosphere where the temperature of the environment decreases faster than the moist adiabatic lapse rate of a saturated air parcel at the same level.The usual way of finding the LFC is to… …   Wikipedia

  • Lifted index — The lifted index (LI) is the temperature difference between an air parcel lifted adiabatically Tp(p) and the temperature of the environment Te(p) at a given pressure height in the troposphere (lowest layer where most weather occurs) of the… …   Wikipedia

  • Cloud condensation nuclei — Aerosol pollution over Northern India and Bangladesh NASA Cloud condensation nuclei or CCNs (also known as cloud seeds) are small particles typically 0.2 µm, or 1/100 th the size of a cloud droplet [1]) about which cloud droplets coalesce. Water… …   Wikipedia

  • Maximum parcel level — The maximum parcel level (MPL) is the highest level in the atmosphere that a moist convectively rising air parcel will reach after ascending through the free convective layer (FCL) and reaching the equilibrium level (EL), near the tropopause. As… …   Wikipedia

  • Convective available potential energy — A skew T plot showing a morning sounding with a large hydrolapse followed by an afternoon sounding showing the cooling which occurred in the mid levels resulting in an unstable atmosphere as surface parcels have now become negatively buoyant. The …   Wikipedia

  • Cloud — For other uses, see Cloud (disambiguation). Cumulus cloudscape over Swifts Creek, Australia A cloud …   Wikipedia

  • Fog — For other uses, see Fog (disambiguation). Part of the Nature series on Weather   Calendar seasons Spring  …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”