Ever wondered why it's always raining in Cork but sunny...
Understanding Earth's Atmosphere and Weather











The Atmosphere Basics
The atmosphere is essentially a 100km-thick layer of gases that keeps us alive and creates all our weather. Think of it as Earth's protective bubble that's constantly moving and changing.
Here's what you're breathing: 78% nitrogen, 21% oxygen, and just 1% of other gases including water vapour. That tiny bit of water vapour might seem insignificant, but it's responsible for every cloud, raindrop, and snowflake you've ever seen.
Weather is what's happening right now - like today's downpour in Dublin. Climate is the long-term average over 30+ years - like Ireland's famously wet reputation. Don't mix these up in your exams!
Quick Tip: Weather elements (temperature, pressure, wind, precipitation) are the building blocks of every weather forecast you check.

Atmospheric Layers
The atmosphere has four main layers, but you really need to know the first two. Here's a handy memory trick: The Sun Makes Things hot (Troposphere, Stratosphere, Mesosphere, Thermosphere).
The troposphere is where all the action happens - it's only 12km thick but contains virtually all our weather. Temperature drops as you go higher (about 6.5°C per 1000m), which explains why Carrauntoohil is always colder than sea level.
The stratosphere sits above it, containing the crucial ozone layer that blocks harmful UV rays. Unlike the troposphere, temperature actually increases with height here because ozone absorbs solar radiation.
Exam Focus: The troposphere is your priority - almost every weather question relates to this bottom layer.

Temperature and Pressure
Temperature is measured using thermometers in Stevenson Screens (those white boxes you see at weather stations). Four main factors affect temperature: how close you are to the equator, your height above sea level, distance from the sea, and which way slopes face.
Ireland's coast stays milder year-round thanks to the sea's slow heating and cooling - that's why Galway has cooler summers but warmer winters than inland Athlone.
Atmospheric pressure is the weight of air pressing down on you, measured in millibars. Low pressure (depressions) means air is rising, cooling, and forming clouds - hello, rainy day! High pressure (anticyclones) means air is sinking and warming - cue the sunny weather.
Map Reading: When isobars (pressure lines) are squashed together, expect strong winds. Spread apart means light winds.

Wind and Weather Patterns
Wind is simply air rushing from high pressure to low pressure areas. In Ireland, our prevailing winds are South-Westerlies - they bring all that Atlantic moisture that keeps our grass so green!
Due to Earth's rotation, winds curve to the right in the Northern Hemisphere (called the Coriolis effect). This is why low-pressure systems spin anti-clockwise and high-pressure systems spin clockwise.
When you see a weather map, look for the 'L' and 'H' symbols. An 'L' means expect clouds, wind, and rain. An 'H' means settled, clear conditions - though in winter, this can bring frost and fog.
Wind Direction: Remember, winds are named from where they're coming from, not where they're going!

Rainfall Types
For precipitation to form, you need moist air that's forced to rise and cool to its dew point (saturation temperature). There are three main types you'll encounter in Ireland.
Relief rainfall happens when our South-Westerly winds hit western mountains like the MacGillycuddy's Reeks. The air is forced upwards, cools, and dumps heavy rain on the western slopes. This creates a rain shadow effect - which is why Dublin gets less than 750mm of rain yearly while Valentia Island gets over 1400mm.
Convectional rainfall occurs on hot summer afternoons when heated ground causes air to rise rapidly, forming towering cumulonimbus clouds. These create those sudden heavy downpours with thunder and lightning.
Ireland's Reality: Most of our rain is frontal rainfall from Atlantic depressions - those weather systems that seem to queue up to soak us!

Frontal Systems and Depressions
Frontal rainfall is Ireland's specialty - it happens when warm and cold air masses meet at weather fronts. The lighter warm air is forced upwards over the denser cold air, creating widespread, prolonged rainfall.
When a depression passes over Ireland, you'll experience a predictable sequence. First, the warm front approaches with falling pressure, high clouds, and steady light rain. Then comes the warm sector with higher temperatures and broken cloud.
Next, the cold front arrives like nature's drama queen - pressure rises sharply, massive dark clouds form, and you get a short burst of very heavy rain, possibly with hail and thunder. Finally, behind the cold front, temperatures drop, pressure continues rising, and you get those classic Irish "bright spells and showers."
Weather Watching: Cold fronts move faster than warm fronts, which is why they eventually catch up and create more complex weather systems.




Mysleli sme si, že sa už nikdy neopýtaš...
Čo je Knowunity AI companion?
Náš AI Companion je AI nástroj zameraný na študentov, ktorý ponúka viac ako len odpovede. Postavený na miliónoch zdrojov Knowunity poskytuje relevantné informácie, personalizované študijné plány, kvízy a obsah priamo v chate, prispôsobujúc sa tvojej individuálnej ceste učenia.
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Je Knowunity naozaj zadarmo?
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Nenašiel si, čo hľadáš? Preskúmaj iné predmety.
Študenti nás milujú — a ty budeš tiež.
Appka je veľmi jednoduchá na používanie a má super dizajn. Zatiaľ som našiel všetko, čo som hľadal, a naučil sa veľa z prezentácií! Určite ju použijem na školskú úlohu! A samozrejme mi to aj veľmi pomáha ako inšpirácia.
Táto appka je naozaj skvelá. Je tu toľko študijných poznámok a pomoci [...]. Môj problémový predmet je napríklad francúzština a appka má toľko možností pomoci. Vďaka tejto appke som si zlepšil francúzštinu. Odporúčal by som ju každému.
Wow, som naozaj ohromený. Vyskúšal som túto appku, lebo som ju videl mnohokrát inzerovať a bol som úplne ohromený. Táto appka je TÁ POMOC, ktorú chceš do školy a hlavne ponúka toľko vecí, ako cvičenia a faktové listy, ktoré mi osobne VEĽMI pomohli.
Understanding Earth's Atmosphere and Weather
Ever wondered why it's always raining in Cork but sunny in Dublin, or why it's freezing on top of a mountain even in summer? The atmosphere is like Earth's protective blanket, and understanding how it works is the key to...

The Atmosphere Basics
The atmosphere is essentially a 100km-thick layer of gases that keeps us alive and creates all our weather. Think of it as Earth's protective bubble that's constantly moving and changing.
Here's what you're breathing: 78% nitrogen, 21% oxygen, and just 1% of other gases including water vapour. That tiny bit of water vapour might seem insignificant, but it's responsible for every cloud, raindrop, and snowflake you've ever seen.
Weather is what's happening right now - like today's downpour in Dublin. Climate is the long-term average over 30+ years - like Ireland's famously wet reputation. Don't mix these up in your exams!
Quick Tip: Weather elements (temperature, pressure, wind, precipitation) are the building blocks of every weather forecast you check.

Atmospheric Layers
The atmosphere has four main layers, but you really need to know the first two. Here's a handy memory trick: The Sun Makes Things hot (Troposphere, Stratosphere, Mesosphere, Thermosphere).
The troposphere is where all the action happens - it's only 12km thick but contains virtually all our weather. Temperature drops as you go higher (about 6.5°C per 1000m), which explains why Carrauntoohil is always colder than sea level.
The stratosphere sits above it, containing the crucial ozone layer that blocks harmful UV rays. Unlike the troposphere, temperature actually increases with height here because ozone absorbs solar radiation.
Exam Focus: The troposphere is your priority - almost every weather question relates to this bottom layer.

Temperature and Pressure
Temperature is measured using thermometers in Stevenson Screens (those white boxes you see at weather stations). Four main factors affect temperature: how close you are to the equator, your height above sea level, distance from the sea, and which way slopes face.
Ireland's coast stays milder year-round thanks to the sea's slow heating and cooling - that's why Galway has cooler summers but warmer winters than inland Athlone.
Atmospheric pressure is the weight of air pressing down on you, measured in millibars. Low pressure (depressions) means air is rising, cooling, and forming clouds - hello, rainy day! High pressure (anticyclones) means air is sinking and warming - cue the sunny weather.
Map Reading: When isobars (pressure lines) are squashed together, expect strong winds. Spread apart means light winds.

Wind and Weather Patterns
Wind is simply air rushing from high pressure to low pressure areas. In Ireland, our prevailing winds are South-Westerlies - they bring all that Atlantic moisture that keeps our grass so green!
Due to Earth's rotation, winds curve to the right in the Northern Hemisphere (called the Coriolis effect). This is why low-pressure systems spin anti-clockwise and high-pressure systems spin clockwise.
When you see a weather map, look for the 'L' and 'H' symbols. An 'L' means expect clouds, wind, and rain. An 'H' means settled, clear conditions - though in winter, this can bring frost and fog.
Wind Direction: Remember, winds are named from where they're coming from, not where they're going!

Rainfall Types
For precipitation to form, you need moist air that's forced to rise and cool to its dew point (saturation temperature). There are three main types you'll encounter in Ireland.
Relief rainfall happens when our South-Westerly winds hit western mountains like the MacGillycuddy's Reeks. The air is forced upwards, cools, and dumps heavy rain on the western slopes. This creates a rain shadow effect - which is why Dublin gets less than 750mm of rain yearly while Valentia Island gets over 1400mm.
Convectional rainfall occurs on hot summer afternoons when heated ground causes air to rise rapidly, forming towering cumulonimbus clouds. These create those sudden heavy downpours with thunder and lightning.
Ireland's Reality: Most of our rain is frontal rainfall from Atlantic depressions - those weather systems that seem to queue up to soak us!

Frontal Systems and Depressions
Frontal rainfall is Ireland's specialty - it happens when warm and cold air masses meet at weather fronts. The lighter warm air is forced upwards over the denser cold air, creating widespread, prolonged rainfall.
When a depression passes over Ireland, you'll experience a predictable sequence. First, the warm front approaches with falling pressure, high clouds, and steady light rain. Then comes the warm sector with higher temperatures and broken cloud.
Next, the cold front arrives like nature's drama queen - pressure rises sharply, massive dark clouds form, and you get a short burst of very heavy rain, possibly with hail and thunder. Finally, behind the cold front, temperatures drop, pressure continues rising, and you get those classic Irish "bright spells and showers."
Weather Watching: Cold fronts move faster than warm fronts, which is why they eventually catch up and create more complex weather systems.




Mysleli sme si, že sa už nikdy neopýtaš...
Čo je Knowunity AI companion?
Náš AI Companion je AI nástroj zameraný na študentov, ktorý ponúka viac ako len odpovede. Postavený na miliónoch zdrojov Knowunity poskytuje relevantné informácie, personalizované študijné plány, kvízy a obsah priamo v chate, prispôsobujúc sa tvojej individuálnej ceste učenia.
Kde si môžem stiahnuť aplikáciu Knowunity?
Aplikáciu si môžeš stiahnuť z Google Play Store a Apple App Store.
Je Knowunity naozaj zadarmo?
Presne tak! Užívaj si bezplatný prístup k študijnému obsahu, spájaj sa s ostatnými študentmi a získaj okamžitú pomoc – všetko na dosah ruky.
Najobľúbenejší obsah v predmete Geography
9Geography notes on rocks
Includes types of rocks,uses of rocks, case studies
Earthquakes revision notes
Notes on earthquakes with diagrams
Population Change and Migration
This covers factors that cause populations to grow or shrink, including birth rates, death rates, and the reasons people migrate.
Rock notes geography
Geography
The sea
Jc Geography
Geography notes On the sea
Includes costal erosion, sea cliffs, longshore drift etc.
Inside the Earth
Students will learn about the basic layers of the Earth: the crust, mantle, and core, understanding that our planet is made up of different parts.
Geography notes on glaciation
Includes diagrams, erosion, deposition, transportation
Geography notes on weather
Includes instruments, diagrams, how to read weather
Najobľúbenejší obsah
9Irish oral questions and answers
Questions and answers for the leaving cert oral
Key Quotes : Sive
Key Quotes and explanations: Sive
Irish oral questions
Outline of oral questions
Iníon- le hÁine Durkin
Aine Durkin’s poem, Iníon: Themes & summary
Irish poetry 2027
Iníon + Dínit an Bhróin
LC HL notes- Iníon (poem)
Includes poem in English and Irish, theme, key words & phrases
Cultural Context : Shawshank Redemption : Sive : Small Things Like These
Comparative Study : Cultural Context : Shawshank Redemption, Sive and Small Things Like These
Mo Ghrá-sa (Idir Lúibíní)
Notes on mo ghrá-sa
An Gaeilge Aiste
Irish Language essay
Nenašiel si, čo hľadáš? Preskúmaj iné predmety.
Študenti nás milujú — a ty budeš tiež.
Appka je veľmi jednoduchá na používanie a má super dizajn. Zatiaľ som našiel všetko, čo som hľadal, a naučil sa veľa z prezentácií! Určite ju použijem na školskú úlohu! A samozrejme mi to aj veľmi pomáha ako inšpirácia.
Táto appka je naozaj skvelá. Je tu toľko študijných poznámok a pomoci [...]. Môj problémový predmet je napríklad francúzština a appka má toľko možností pomoci. Vďaka tejto appke som si zlepšil francúzštinu. Odporúčal by som ju každému.
Wow, som naozaj ohromený. Vyskúšal som túto appku, lebo som ju videl mnohokrát inzerovať a bol som úplne ohromený. Táto appka je TÁ POMOC, ktorú chceš do školy a hlavne ponúka toľko vecí, ako cvičenia a faktové listy, ktoré mi osobne VEĽMI pomohli.