Thanks to the regular showing of weather charts on television, this important
pressure-wind relationship is now reasonably familiar, but it is none the less a somewhat surprising result. The only obvious force acting on the air is that due
to the gradient of pressure, and one would expect air to flow directly from high to low pressure as it does, for example, in escaping from a tyre when the valve is
loosened. But clearly this cannot happen in the atmosphere, for if it did the pressure field would quickly become uniform and barometer readings would never change.
There must be some other, latent, force at work - this arises from the rotation of the earth. In the Northern Hemisphere, the rotational force acts to the right of the direction
in which the air moves, and the net result of this force and the pressure force acting at the same time is the observed air flow almost along the isobars rather than
directly across them. Airflow near the ground is affected by a third force, namely friction; this reduces the wind speed and also makes the winds blow slightly across
the isobars towards the lower pressure. Near the surface therefore, air circulating round an anticyclone as in the image above tends to spiral outwards slightly from the
centre, and air from above descends to take the place of that being removed at lower levels. In a similar manner, the surface winds blowing round a depression
spiral slightly inwards, and this leads to upward air movement. As we will see these upward and downward motions of the air have important consequences in
terms of cloud formation.
In the image at the left, isobars and therefore winds are in the same direction on both sides of the front which is thus stationary. Sooner or later, the front develops a bulge into the cold air.
The isobars will then cross the front, and the two parts of the front move in the general direction of the winds; the leading part where warm air replaces
cold is call a warm front, and the rear part where cold air replaces warm is called a cold front. A bulge of this kind is usually called a wave because of its shape
and the fact that it progresses as do waves on the sea surface. Pressure falls at the tip of the wave which eventually develops into the centre of adepression.
In general, a cold front moves faster than a warm front, thus eventually catching up the warm front ahead. The really warm air is then lifted clear of the ground (i.e. is occluded).
By this time, the cold air ahead of and behind the depression will have developed slightly different characteristics, thus maintaining a surface discontinuity which is called an
occluded front or occlusion. Most commonly, the northerly flow behind the depression is colder than the southerly flow ahead, and the image below shows the appearance of a
weather chart in this case.
The first barometer was invented in 1643 by the Italian scientist Evangelista Torricelli,
who used a column of water in a tube 34 ft (10.4 m) long. This inconvenient water column was soon replaced by mercury,
which is denser than water and requires a tube about 3 ft (0.9 m) long. The mercurial barometer consists of a glass tube,
sealed at one end and filled with pure mercury. After being heated to expel the air, it is inverted in a small cup of
mercury called the cistern. The mercury in the tube sinks slightly, creating above it a vacuum (the Torricellian vacuum).
Atmospheric pressure on the surface of the mercury in the cistern supports the column in the tube, which varies in height
with variations in atmospheric pressure and hence with changes in elevation, generally decreasing with increases in height
above sea level. Standard sea-level pressure is 14.7 lb per sq in. (1,030 grams per sq cm), which is equivalent to a
column of mercury 29.92 in. (760 mm) in height; the decrease with elevation is approximately 1 in. (2.5 cm) for every
900 ft (270 m) of ascent.
In weather forecasting, barometric readings are usually measured on electronically controlled
instruments often tied to computers. The results are plotted on base maps so that analyses of weather-producing pressure
systems can be made. At a given location a storm is generally anticipated when the barometer is falling rapidly; when the
barometer is rising, fair weather may usually be expected. The aneroid barometer is a metallic box so made that when the
air has been partially removed from the box the surface depresses or expands with variation of air pressure on it; this
motion is transmitted by a train of levers to a pointer which shows the pressure on a graduated scale. A barograph is a
self-recording aneroid barometer; an altimeter is often an aneroid barometer used to calculate altitude.
However, that drawback affects only the recording technique and can be overcome by using electronic rather than mechanical methods to display the pressure
variation over aperiod. i.e. to show the barometric characteristic at a glance. The barograph record which results just from the movement and development of pressure systems
is normally smooth, but when a front passes, it shows an abrupt rather than a gradual change. Fronts always lie in Troughs of Low Pressure, and as in the images above shown,
where an isobar crosses a front there is an angled kink pointing away from the centre of low pressure. The passage of a front is thus marked not only by a change of weather,
but by an abrupt shift of wind direction in a clockwise sense (i.e. a wind veer) and also by a sharp change in the rate of fall or rise of the barometer. If the wave shown in the images above
moves, without deepening, parallel to the isobars in the warm air (this is a good first approximation tor a newly formed wave depression), pressure will fall ahead of the wave,
become steady when the warm front passes, and start rising immediately behind the cold front. When continuous outdoor observations cannot be made, fronts can still be
detected in this way from the barograph record. Pressure changes in temperate latitudes are generally irregular, being tor the most part due to the movement and development
of pressure systems. For much of the time, these pressure systems move in a roughly easterly direction, but occasionally this progression is halted when a large system,
usually an anticyclone, becomes stationary tor several days, blocking the normal mobility like a giant thrombosis; most of the speIls of extreme weather mentioned in the
introduction were associated with blocking of this kind. Cloud systems and their evolution provide very useful guidance about the weather tor a few hours ahead, but a great
deal more can be inferred if wind and pressure changes are also noted.