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6.3 Solar Energy Vocabulary

6.3 The student will investigate and understand the role of solar energy in driving the most natural processes within the atmosphere, hydrosphere, and in Earth’s surface. Key Ideas include: a) Earth’s energy budget; b) the role of radiation and convection in the distribution of energy; c) the motion of the atmosphere and the oceans; d) could formation; and e) the role of thermal energy in weather-related phenomena including thunderstorms and hurricanes.

AB
solar radiationEnergy radiated from the sun in the form of electromagnetic waves, including visible and ultraviolet and infrared light.
atmosphereThe mixture of gases that surrounds Earth. The outermost of the four spheres into which scientists divide Earth.
radiationThe direct transfer of energy through empty space by electromagnetic waves.
infrared radiationA form of energy with wavelengths that are longer than visible light.
visible lightThe light in the electromagnetic spectrum that we can see, longer wavelength than infrared, shorter wavelength than ultraviolet radiation.
ultraviolet radiationA form of energy with wavelengths that are shorter than visible light.
reflectionCast back light or heat.
absorptionTaking in or reception by molecular or chemical action, as of gases or liquids.
solar energyEnergy from the sun.
carbon dioxideColorless, odorless, incombustible gas present in the atmosphere and formed during respiration.
greenhouse effectThe process by which heat is trapped in the atmosphere by water vapor, carbon dioxide, methane, and other gases that form a “blanket” around Earth.
convectionThe transfer of heat by movements of a fluid.
densityThe amount of mass in a given space; mass per unit volume.
thermal energyThe energy of motion in the molecules of a substance.
evaporationThe process by which molecules at the surface of a liquid, such as water, absorb enough energy to change to a gaseous state, such as water vapor.
condensationThe process by which a gas, such as water vapor, changes to a liquid, such as water.
thunderstormA storm of lightning and thunder, usually with rain and gusty winds, sometimes with hail or snow, produced by cumulonimbus clouds.
hurricaneA tropical storm that has winds of 119 kilometers per hour or higher; typically about 600 kilometers across.
electromagnetic waveA form of energy that can travel through space.
cloudA visible collection of particles of water or ice suspended in the air, usually at an elevation above the Earth’s surface.
hydrosphereThe water on or surrounding the surface of the globe, including the water of the oceans and the water in the atmosphere.
cumulusClouds that form less than 2 kilometers above the ground and look like fluffy, rounded piles of cotton.
stratusClouds that form in flat layers.
cirrusWispy, feathery clouds made mostly of ice crystals that form at high levels, above about 6 kilometers.
nimbusDense clouds or cloud mass with ragged edges, that yields rain or snow.
tornadoA rapidly whirling, funnel-shaped cloud that reaches down from a storm cloud to touch Earth’s surface, usually leaving a destructive path.
storm surgeA dome of water that sweeps across the coast where a hurricane lands.



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