subject

Dynamic Meteorology 1

lecturers

Dr. Weidinger Tamás, associate professor

credits

3+2=5

period

5

curriculum

The main stages in the development of dynamic meteorology, the thermodynamics of dry and moist air, the vertical structure of the static atmosphere, the stability conditions of a vertically moving air particle. The Lagrangian and Eulerian description of the atmospheric processes, the basics of atmospheric kinematics, the continuity equation, the moisture transport equation and their major simplifications.

The aim of the practices is to increase the problem solving ability of the students, and teach them upper-atmospheric measurement processing.   

literature

Bohren C. F., Albrecht B. A., 1998: Atmospheric Thermodynamics, University Press.

Holton J. 1992: An introduction to dynamic meteorology, Academic Press, Third Edition, San Diego, New York, Boston, London, Sydney, Tokio, Toronto.

Panchev S., 1985: Dynamic Meteorology. D. Reidel Publishing Company, Dordrecht.

Atkinson B. W., 1981: Dynamical Meteorology. An Introductory Selection. Methuen.

form of tuition

lectures, practical exercises

mode of assessment

written exam, reporting

 

 

subject

Dynamic Meteorology 2

lecturers

Dr. Weidinger Tamás, associate professor

credits

3+1=4

period

6

curriculum

The basics of atmospheric dynamics, the forces acting in the atmosphere. The general form of the atmospheric hydro-thermodynamic equations in the Eulerian and Lagrangian approach, in different coordinate systems (spherical, Cartesian, terrain-following, pressure, sigma, potential temperature). The scale analysis of the equations, balance motions. Circulation and vorticity. The vorticity and divergence equations and their meteorological applications. The role of potential vorticity in the evolution of atmospheric processes. Discontinuity surfaces in the atmosphere.

The aim of the practices is to increase the problem solving ability of the students, to write the atmospheric equations in different coordinate systems, to compute invariant quantities of balance flows and wind fields (FORTRAN programming).

literature

Holton J. 1992: An introduction to dynamic meteorology, Academic Press, Third Edition, San Diego, New York, Boston, London, Sydney, Tokio, Toronto.

Atkinson B. W., 1981: Dynamical Meteorology. An Introductory Selection. Methuen.

Pedlosky J., 1986: Geophysical Fluid Dynamics, Second Edition, Springer-Verlag.

form of tuition

lectures, practical exercises

mode of assessment

oral exam, reporting