ES 403: Atmospheric Science (MAS)
Course Title |
Atmospheric Science (MAS) |
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Course Code |
ES 403 |
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Course Type |
Core |
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Level |
Postgraduate |
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Year / Semester |
1st/1st |
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Instructor’s Name |
Panos Hadjinicolaou (Lead Instructor), Nikos Mihalopoulos, Mihalis Vrekoussis, George Biskos |
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ECTS |
10 |
Lectures / week |
1 (3h) |
Laboratories / week |
None |
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Course Purpose and Objectives |
The course aims to provide a foundation for the physical and chemical aspects of the atmosphere in an intellectually rigorous but accessible format. Theoretical understanding and practical sense is pursued of the fundamentals of atmospheric physics and chemistry, covering wide spatial and temporal scales of manifestation of atmospheric phenomena pertinent to the environment. There will be an emphasis on the lower part of the atmosphere including a description of the atmospheric composition and structure and a presentation of the main processes in the atmosphere such as heat and moisture exchange, radiation, particles, air motion and related manifestations such as air temperature, cloud formation, precipitation. In addition, chemical principles applied to the study of atmospheres will be introduced, as well as atmospheric photochemistry and kinetics, radical reactions and chemical lifetime determinations. The course also includes an introduction to climate change as a direct application of relevant atmospheric processes. |
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Learning Outcomes |
By the end of the course students should be able to: list the main components of the atmosphere; understand their key manifestations such as the behaviour of air parcels with their surroundings involving heat, radiation, moisture, momentum and matter; deduce expected outcomes for a given atmospheric situation (e.g. stability of the atmosphere given a temperature profile); describe cloud formation and precipitation; use fundamental chemistry to explain important atmospheric process; foresee the impact and fate of chemical species on the atmosphere; explain the causes of climate change from an atmospheric perspective. |
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Prerequisites |
None |
Required | Nono | ||||
Course Content |
01: Constitution, state and measuring of the atmosphere 02: Atmospheric thermodynamics I 03: Atmospheric thermodynamics II 04: Cloud and precipitation 05: Atmospheric motion 06: Atmospheric radiation 07: Convection and advection 08: Surface and boundary layer 09: Atmospheric Aerosol Particles 10: Introduction to atmospheric chemistry (challenges and perspectives) 11: Atmospheric photochemistry and lifetimes 12: Atmospheric chemical kinetics 13: Natural and anthropogenic climate change 14: Chemistry-climate interactions |
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Teaching Methodology |
Lectures |
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Bibliography |
1) Wallace J.M. and Hobbs P.V., Atmospheric Science: An Introductory Survey, 2nd Edition, 2006, Elsevier, pp 483. 2) McIlveen R., Fundamentals of Weather and Climate, 2010, Oxford University Press, 632 pp. |
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Assessment |
Tests and Final Exam |
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Language |
English |