Air waves

On the Friday night when we saw crepuscular rays, we also saw waves.

Faint waves

Faint waves

I had been watching the sky in hopes of seeing waves for quite a while, but it seemed that they were either not there when I had a camera or I didn’t have a camera when they were there. So I was happy to see these waves, although they are not the best examples.

These waves are probably typical of the size we think of when we think of cloud waves, but atmospheric waves range from very small, just millimeters in length, all the way up to the size of continents. Sound waves are a good example of the smaller waves. Frontal boundaries that the TV weatherman talks about are good examples of the biggest waves in the Earth’s atmosphere.

Sound waves are compression waves; that is the air particles move back and forth in the same direction that the wave moves. The other type of wave, the ones you see in the clouds, are transverse waves. The particles in transverse waves move perpendicular to the direction that the wave moves, like the surface of water waves.*

Almost the only time we can see atmospheric waves is when clouds form, and, despite how it looks, the clouds are not the top of the waves. Atmospheric waves that travel horizontally, like water waves, may also propagate vertically. If the wave happens to be in a part of the atmosphere that has water vapor that’s close to the point where it condenses, clouds may form. The water can evaporate in the trough of the wave and condense in the form of clouds at the peak of the wave. If the conditions aren’t right, the clouds don’t reveal the waves.

There are other conditions when you can see a wave without clouds, but you might want to stay away from them. A shock wave is created when there is a &imgrefurl=http://www.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/8569953.stm&h=288&w=512&sz=19&tbnid=PVcd37uQacDz2M:&tbnh=70&tbnw=125&prev=/search%3Fq%3Dexplosion%2Bshock%2Bwave%26tbm%3Disch%26tbo%3Du&zoom=1&q=explosion+shock+wave&usg=__p7sP0KL0BLNx4DsVyPXUVWCSLcM=&docid=r2YQl9k-AdhmFM&sa=X&ei=vnrXUarfC4jS9QTo9oC4Dw&sqi=2&ved=0CDoQ9QEwAg&dur=306#imgdii=_” target=”_blank”>large explosion, and if the conditions and viewing are right, you can see the wave front because the highly-compressed, dense air at the wave front refracts the light.

Waves in the atmosphere are caused by some kind of disturbance to the air flow. It can be something outside the air, like air moving over a mountain range (&imgrefurl=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orographic_lift&h=203&w=320&sz=23&tbnid=2WbFevhVqvRPvM:&tbnh=76&tbnw=120&prev=/search%3Fq%3Dorographic%2Bwaves%2Bin%2Bthe%2Batmosphere%26tbm%3Disch%26tbo%3Du&zoom=1&q=orographic+waves+in+the+atmosphere&usg=__mUCs8RxShhAjyoG0LuKI8vDeCAw=&docid=HDav7_YpO0p_uM&sa=X&ei=nnvXUfG9G4zY9QTnzoCoDA&ved=0CEAQ9QEwBA&dur=349″ target=”_blank”>orographic waves), or it can be something happening in the air itself, like winds moving in different directions or at different speeds at different levels of the atmosphere. That was the case for the waves here. I could tell that there were at least two levels of clouds, because some clouds were moving relative to other clouds. Puffy cumulus clouds were scooting across the sky, and the clouds where the waves formed look stationary compared to them. The waves formed at the interface between those different layers of air.

A little later in the evening, the sun told us that the clouds were at a minimum of three levels.

Clouds at three levels of the atmosphere

Clouds at three levels of the atmosphere

It’s not immediately obvious which clouds are higher than the others, but the highest clouds are white, because they are in the full sun. The middle level clouds are reddish, because the sun’s rays are traveling on a long path close to the horizon and have lost a lot of their blue light. The lowest clouds are dark, because they are so low that they are in the Earth’s shadow.

There are some great pictures of cloud waves on the Web, even &imgrefurl=http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/earthpicturegalleries/5400324/Extraordinary-Clouds-and-The-Cloud-Collectors-Handbook.html?image%3D9&h=400&w=620&sz=28&tbnid=ACYEQElJY98v8M:&tbnh=90&tbnw=140&prev=/search%3Fq%3Dcloud%2Bwaves%26tbm%3Disch%26tbo%3Du&zoom=1&q=cloud+waves&usg=__yxA66cIdDVudsBA0T36SfS7nJUk=&docid=sIeX93cj6EW5FM&sa=X&ei=QnzXUaqVFZTW8gSx8YGYDQ&ved=0CDwQ9QEwAw&dur=357″ target=”_blank”>breaking waves, much more dramatic than mine. I’m going to keep the camera handy, just in case I get a chance to catch some of them.

 

* If you happen to have experienced an earthquake, you probably already know about the two types of waves. In an earthquake, compression waves, called primary or P waves, hit first. Transverse waves, called secondary or S waves, arrive later. Geologists can use the time difference in the arrivals to estimate how far away the epicenter was. Back here in Georgia, although we have a lot of earthquakes, we rarely have one severe enough to really notice, and very infrequently is there an earthquake strong enough to feel the S waves. Around 10 years ago there was one strong enough to notice. It happened in the middle of the night, maybe around 3 am. A sudden shock woke me up. It was like someone had kicked the bed or a heavy weight had fallen to the floor. A few seconds later the room started to sway, like a boat bobbing in waves. The effect of the P waves was eerie. It made the world seem like a very different place from the one I was used to, where rooms stay put. The initial P wave effect seemed more familiar, because it was just like what we used to feel when there was blasting at the rock quarry about a mile from where I lived as a kid. I tried to find that earthquake in a USGS database, but I can’t identify it. There were at least three with a magnitude of 4 or greater in 2002 and 2003. This magnitude is high enough that the earthquake is noticeable indoors and may cause objects to fall, but rarely causes damage.

Crepuscular rays

It’s an ugly name for one of the most beautiful phenomena you can see in the sky. Crepuscular means occurring or active during twilight. Crepuscular rays are rays of sunlight streaming through clouds that seem to converge on the position of the sun. They can occur anytime during the day, but are probably most common at dawn or dusk; thus, the name. I have been looking for a good example without much luck. Friday evening while Leah and I were looking at some very nice clouds showing something else I had been looking for, I realized we might get crepuscular rays. And we did.

Crepuscular rays

Crepuscular rays

They are faint, but they’re there. A zoomed image shows them a little better.

Zoomed crepuscular rays

Zoomed crepuscular rays

I might have been able to emphasize the rays with some manipulation in Elements, but I wanted to keep the image as close as possible to the way it actually looked to the naked eye. And we might have been able to get more dramatic pictures if we could have seen the sunset closer to the horizon. Unfortunately, we can’t actually see the sunset from our deck because the sun goes down behind the mountain. We get good sunrises, but from the deck, the sun disappears pretty early in the evening.

There were some other interesting things going on in the sky Friday, including some I have been waiting to see for a while. I’ll post those later.

Promises, promises

Partial rainbow

Partial rainbow

We’ve had a lot of rain over the last two weekends. Rome and Floyd County were in flash-flood warning areas both weekends. The heaviest rain was ending Monday evening as I walked the dogs. This partial rainbow appeared right before sunset. According to the Atlanta TV weathermen, it’s supposed to dry up and get warmer this week. And rain again next Saturday.

All lined up on the mountain

There are some really nice views from up on the mountain, but not all the views are so great. The best place to see the furthest is the end of the road that goes past our house. But that also happens to be the place where the power lines cross the mountain.

Powerlines and the view from Lavender Mountain

Powerlines and the view from Lavender Mountain

This was taken in the morning, while fog was still covering the Coosa River. The fog covering the river is visible on the left just below the horizon, and to the right of the mountain behind the suspension towers. You can also see Plant Hammond and a little of its stack plume on the right, and a paper mill a little upriver, which is spewing quite a plume of steam right behind the tower.

The power lines start on the other side of the mountain in Texas Valley at the Rocky Mountain Pump Storage Facility, which is owned and operated by Georgia Power and Oglethorpe Power. The valley is unusual in that it is nearly a completely enclosed pocket with just a small outlet, and with a mountain (Rocky Mountain) located in the center. It’s so unusual that it’s easily recognizable from airliner altitude. The upper storage part of the pump-storage facility is on top of the mountain. There are two or three lakes down in the valley that also store water.

A pump-storage powerplant operates by impounding water at a relatively low elevation. During off-peak times, when the demand for power is low, electric power is used to pump water uphill to a storage impoundment at a higher elevation, in this case, on the top of Rocky Mountain. Then, when there is a higher demand for power, the water runs down through generators and ends up back in the lower reservoirs. The laws of physics mean that a pump-storage power plant is a net consumer of energy. In other words, it uses more electrical energy than it produces. It only makes economic sense because the power companies can charge more for the power it produces during peak demand times than it costs for the power it consumes during off-peak times.

Three power generation facilities are visible from just behind where I was standing to take this picture. As I mentioned, you can see Georgia Power’s Plant Hammond from this point. On a clear day you can also see Georgia Power’s Plant Bowen, which is on the Etowah River. The Etowah flows to Rome where it joins with the Oostanaula River to form the Coosa. Both of those power plants are coal-fired. Back in 2006 a report by the Environmental Integrity Project said that Plant Bowen led the country in sulfur emissions from power plants. Bowen has a huge generating capacity. It’s rated at over 3000 MW. Hammond is relatively small at only 800 MW. The Rocky Mountain facility is rated at 215 MW, which is smaller than any coal-fired plant, although quite respectable by hydroelectric standards. I guess that’s because of the greater head, or difference between the upper water level and the lower water level. Of course we have to pay to put virtually all that water up on top of Rocky Mountain, while Mother Nature puts the water behind the dams for free. Both Hammond and Bowen produce pollutants in the form of sulfur compounds and particulates, both of which are harmful in their own ways. Rocky Mountain doesn’t directly produce much of any pollutants. All of its pollutants are emitted by other power plants, probably including both Hammond and Bowen.

There’s no free ride.

The long and the short

It was cloudy all day Monday, but when we left the hospital that night, it was clear. Not much cooler, but clear enough. The sidewalk was wet and the street looked black and slick. The gravel in our driveway was dark, and water was dripping from the metal roof. It’s easy to understand why people say that dew falls, because the areas under the trees were dry, as if the dew had not fallen through the pine needles. But, of course, dew doesn’t really fall, it condenses on surfaces that have a clear view of the sky. To the infrared eyes of the Earth, a clear night sky is a very cold thing, so the surfaces loses its heat quickly and the moisture in the air condenses on the now-cold surface.

Tuesday morning was still warm. Fog hid everything below the mountain, but we were clear, at least until I took the dogs for a walk.

Zeke and Lucy

Zeke and Lucy

There was a little fog here and there, but it was mostly clear.

Lucy, my mother’s little dog, accompanied Zeke and me. We call her Lucy, Lulu, Lucille, or sometimes Lucifer, but she’s not really a bad dog at all. She has been a true friend and companion for my mother for probably 10 years. We started encouraging Mother to get a dog for company soon after my father died, and eventually she gave in. It’s a funny thing to watch, if you know my mother. She was never a dog person. All our childhood pets had to stay outside, and she never did much more than touch their heads with her fingertips. And now Lucy sleeps on her bed, tucked right up against her back. And she lies on Mother’s lap when Mother reclines and watches NCIS reruns.

Lucy is staying with us until Mother goes home. And then Lucy will go back home with her and keep her back warm until the end.