AVIATION WEATHER

GENERAL STRUCTURE OF THE ATMOSPHERE

ELO 2.1 Describe the characteristics of the troposphere, tropopause, and the stratosphere.

TROPOSPHERE

TROPOPAUSE

STRATOSPHERE

 

ELO 2.2 Describe the flight conditions associated with the troposphere, tropopause, and the stratosphere.

TROPOSPHERE

TROPOPAUSE

STRATOSPHERE

 

ELO 2.3 Identify the six weather elements a pilot may encounter.

- Temperature

- Atmospheric pressure

 

ELO 2.4 Identify the six primary hazards to flight.

TURBULENCE

THUNDERSTORMS

WIND SHEAR

ICING

LOW CEILINGS

LOW VISIBILITY

 

ATMOSPHERIC TEMPERATURE AND PRESSURE

ELO 2.5 Define specific heat and how it effects the warming of the earth.

ELO 2.6 State the primary source for all weather.

ELO 2.7 Define lapse rate.

ELO 2.8 State the average lapse rate in degrees Celsius

ELO 2.9 List and define the lapse rates: steep, shallow, isothermal, and inversion relative to the standard lapse rate.

STEEP LAPSE RATE

SHALLOW LAPSE RATE

ISOTHERMAL LAPSE RATE

INVERSION

ELO 2.10 Define atmospheric pressure.

ELO 2.11 State the standard units of pressure measurement.

ELO 2.12 Differentiate between sea level pressure and station pressure.

SEA LEVEL PRESSURE

STATION PRESSURE

ELO 2.13 Define the standard atmosphere to include temperature and pressure.

ELO 2.14 List the major items found on the surface pressure/analysis chart.

ISOBARS

HIGH

LOW

RIDGE

TROUGH

ELO 2.15 Explain pressure gradient.

ELO 2.16 Define indicated altitude, calibrated altitude, MSL (Mean Sea Level) altitude, and AGL (Above Ground Level) altitude, pressure altitude, and density altitude.

INDICATED ALTITUDE

CALIBRATED ALTITUDE

MSL (MEAN SEE LEVEL) ALTITUDE

AGL (ABOVE GROUND LEVEL) ALTITUDE

PRESSURE ALTITUDE

DENSITY ALTITUDE

ELO 2.17 Describe the effects of pressure changes on aircraft altimeters.

ELO 2.18 State the effects of temperature deviations from the standard lapse rate on aircraft altimeters.

ELO 2.19 Calculate the MSL altitude, AGL altitude, and the altimeter error resulting from a change in atmospheric pressure.

 

WINDS AND THEIR CIRCULATION

ELO 2.20 Identify the factors that affect wind circulation.

ELO 2.21 Identify the forces that affect wind direction.

ELO 2.22 Explain Coriolis force and its apparent effect on wind.

ELO 2.23 In accordance with the Tri-Cellular theory describe the location of the semi-permanent high and low pressure centers.

ELO 2.24 State the three major wind belts in the northern hemisphere that result from the Tri-Cellular theory.

NORTHEAST TRADE WINDS

PREVAILING WESTERLIES

POLAR EASTERLIES

ELO 2.25 Explain and identify gradient winds with respect to the isobars around high and low pressure systems in northern hemisphere.

ELO 2.26 Explain and identify the surface wind direction with respect to the gradient winds in a high and low pressure system in the northern hemisphere.

ELO 2.27 State the direction of the wind flow associated with high pressure and low pressure systems.

ELO 2.28 Define Buys Ballot’s Law and describe its effect on an aircraft flying towards the center of a high or low pressure system.

ELO 2.29 Describe the jet stream.

ELO 2.30 Describe land and sea breezes.

LAND BREEZE

SEA BREEZE

ELO 2.31 Describe valley and mountain winds.

VALLEY WINDS

MOUNTAIN WINDS

 

CLOUDS AND MOISTURE

ELO 2.32 Define saturation, dew point, dew point depression, relative humidity, and specific humidity.

SATURATION

DEW POINT

DEW POINT DEPRESSION

RELATIVE HUMIDITY

SPECIFIC HUMIDITY

ELO 2.33 State the relationships between saturation, dew point temperature, and dew point depression that are necessary for the formation of clouds, fog, and precipitation.

ELO 2.34 Explain the relationship between specific humidity and dew point temperature.

ELO 2.35 Describe the three characteristics of precipitation.

SHOWERS

CONTINUOUS

INTERMITTENT

ELO 2.36 Describe the types of precipitation.

DRIZZLE

FREEZING DRIZZLE

RAIN

FREEZING RAIN

HAIL

ICE PELLETS

SNOW GRAINS

SNOW

ELO 2.37 Describe how clouds form the flight conditions associated with cumulus, stratus, nimbostratus, altostratus, cumulonimbus, and cirrus.

Clouds result in precipitation that affects flight conditions as follows:

ELO 2.38 Describe the types of precipitation associated with the various clouds.

CUMULUS

CUMULONIMBUS

STRATUS

NIMBOSTRATUS

ALTOSTRATUS

CIRRUS

 

ATMOPSPHERIC STABILITY

ELO 2.39 Describe atmospheric stability, instability, and neutral stability.

ATMOSPHERIC STABILITY

ATMOSPHERIC INSTABILITY

NEUTRAL STABILITY

ELO 2.40 Describe the adiabatic process.

ELO 2.41 Describe the lapse rates, associated weather conditions, and the values of the dry and moist adiabatic lapse rates in degrees Celsius.

ADIABATIC LAPSE RATE

DRY ADIABATIC LAPSE RATE

MOIST ADIABATIC LAPSE RATE

ENVIRONMENTAL LAPSE RATE

ELO 2.42 Describe the four types of lifting.

CONVERGENCE

FRONTAL

OROGRAPHIC

THERMAL

ELO 2.43 Describe the conditions that must exist for conditional instability.

ELO 2.44 Describe the conditions that must exist for convective instability.

ELO 2.45 Identify the flight conditions associated with a stable and unstable atmosphere including cloud type, turbulence, precipitation, visibility, winds, and icing.

FLIGHT CONDITIONS

STABLE ATMOSPHERE

UNSTABLE ATMOSPHERE

Cloud Type

Stratus

Cumulus

Turbulence

Smooth

Rough

Visibility

Poor

Good (Outside Clouds)

Winds

Steady

Gusty

Precipitation

Steady

Showery

Icing

Rime

Clear

 

AIR MASSES

ELO 2.46 Define and air mass.

ELO 2.47 Describe the air mass classification system, including moisture content, temperature, and source region with respect to latitudes.

SYMBOL

SOURCE REGION AND SURFACE

PROPERTIES

cA

Continental Arctic

Coldest, Dry

cP

Continental Polar

Cold, Dry

mP

Maritime Polar

Cold, Moist

mT

Maritime Tropical

Warm, Moist

cT

Continental Tropical

Warm, Dry

E

Equatorial

Warmest, Moist

S

Superior

Warm, Driest

ELO 2.48 Describe the relationship between air mass temperature and stability.

ELO 2.49 Identify the flight conditions associated with Maritime Polar, Continental Polar, Maritime Tropical, and Continental Tropical air masses.

 

FRONTAL SYSTEMS

ELO 2.50 Define the terms front and frontogenesis.

FRONT

FRONTOGENESIS

ELO 2.51 Define the general characteristics of a front, including its structure.

ELO 2.52 Describe the polar front.

ELO 2.53 Describe the continuities used to locate and classify fronts.

ELO 2.54 Describe the factors that influence frontal weather.

ELO 2.55 Describe the conditions associated with cold fronts.

ELO 2.56 Describe the characteristics of the squall line.

ELO 2.57 Describe the conditions associated with a warm front.

ELO 2.58 Describe the conditions associated with a stationary front.

ELO 2.59 Describe the conditions associated with occluded fronts.

ELO 2.60 Describe the conditions for upper fronts to develop.

ELO 2.61 Describe the conditions associated with an inactive front.

 

THUNDERSTORMS

ELO 2.62 Describe the requirements for thunderstorm formation.

ELO 2.63 Describe the thunderstorm life cycle and the characteristics of each stage, including pressure variations.

ELO 2.64 Describe the two types of thunderstorms.

FRONTAL THUNDERSTORMS

ELO 2.65 Identify the hazards associated with thunderstorms.

ELO 2.66 Define microburst.

ELO 2.67 Identify the characteristics of a microburst

ELO 2.68 Describe the formations and conditions associated with tornado activity.

ELO 2.69 Explain how radar can aid a pilot when flying in the vicinity of thunderstorms.

ELO 2.70 Describe the recommended techniques for flight in or near thunderstorms.

 

TURBULENCE

ELO 2.71 List the intensities used to describe turbulence.

ELO 2.72 Define the terms used to report turbulence with respect to time.

ELO 2.73 Describe how thermal turbulence develops.

ELO 2.74 Describe the cloud formations associated with thermal turbulence

ELO 2.75 Describe how mechanical turbulence develops.

ELO 2.76 Describe the cloud formations and conditions associated with mountain wave turbulence.

ELO 2.77 Describe the rules for flight in the vicinity of mountain waves.

ELO 2.78 Describe how frontal lifting creates turbulence.

ELO 2.79 Describe how large scale wind shear creates turbulence.

ELO 2.80 Describe the flight techniques for turbulence avoidance.

 

ICING

ELO 2.81 Identify the effects and hazards of aircraft icing.

ELO 2.82 Describe supercooled water.

ELO 2.83 Describe wet snow and avoidance techniques.

ELO 2.84 State the requirements for the formation of structural freezing.

ELO 2.85 State the temperature range most conducive to structural icing.

ELO 2.86 Describe the factors affecting the accumulation of structural icing.

ELO 2.87 Describe the different types of anti-icing and deicing equipment.

DEICING EQUIPMENT

ANTI-ICING EQUIPMENT

ELO 2.88 Describe the types of structural icing.

CLEAR ICE

RIME ICE

MIXED ICE

FROST

ELO 2.88A Describe the hazards of structural icing.

ELO 2.89 Describe induction icing, compressor icing, and fuel systems icing.

INDUCTION ICING

COMPRESSOR ICING

FUEL SYSTEMS ICING

ELO 2.90 Describe the ground icing hazards.

ELO 2.91 Identify icing conditions associated with air masses, fronts and thunderstorms.

AIR MASS ICING

FRONTAL ICING

THUNDERSTORM ICING

ELO 2.92 Identify the procedures to minimize or avoid effects of icing.

ELO 2.93 Identify the types and intensity of icing.

TYPES

- Rime Ice

- Mixed Ice

INTENSITIES

ELO 2.94 Describe the importance of Pilot Reports (PIREPS).

 

CEILINGS AND VISIBILITY

ELO 2.95 Define the following terms: visibility, flight visibility, prevailing visibility, slant range visibility, and runway visual range.

VISIBILITY

FLIGHT VISIBILITY

PREVAILING VISIBILITY

SLANT RANGE VISIBILITY

RUNWAY VISUAL RANGE

ELO 2.96 Identify the amount of sky coverage associated with the following terms: sky clear, few, scattered, broken, overcast, and vertical visibility.

CLASSIFICATION

MEANING

SKY COVERAGE

SKC

Sky Clear

0/8 ths

FEW

Trace

0/8 – 2/8 ths

SCT

Scattered

3/8 – 4/8 ths

BKN

Broken

5/8 – 7/8 ths

OVC

Overcast

8/8 ths

VV

Vertical Visibility

8/8 ths

ELO 2.97 Define and identify obscuring phenomena.

ELO 2.98 Define ceiling and vertical visibility.

CEILING

VERTICAL VISIBILITY

ELO 2.99 Describe how the vertical visibility and obscuring phenomena may constitute a ceiling.

ELO 2.100 Define fog.

ELO 2.101 Identify the four requirements for fog formation.

ELO 2.102 Describe how winds aid in the formation and dissipation of fog.

ELO 2.103 Identify the specific types of fog.

ELO 2.104 Identify how specific types of fog form and dissipate.

RADIATION FOG

ADVECTION FOG

UPSLOPE FOG

STEAM FOG

ICE FOG