ie
KELLOGG:

(continved)

and that 1s because of the way they cutthrough the clbuds.

If we could have the first slide, I dould rexind you ¢f the way

the atmosphere is shaped, and the way a cloud soving th the
Edinger,

ateosphere is shaped. This is a slide prepared by Jim

and those of you who were here the first afternoon sani the slide.
It shows a sketch-—-and this is a fanciful sketch, but It is
based on the way one would expect the atacephere to bel

showing the cloud at the end of, roughly, one day, and] taking
is ne

two cases: one a rather unrealistic case in which thers

shear and in which the cloud simply spreads through telthe action

of gross turbulence and fine-scale turbulence togetheriant, as

again), you

Jim pointed out (we won't go through the arguments

would not expect it to be homogeneously distributed; if would

=

and gare

be pulled apart and would present wisps and hot spots

and patterns, Then the arganent went on to indicate ti
" ectually we aleoat invariably would have shears, and of the
.

4

vat

cloud, inateed ef being in a pancake section of the atdesphere,

would actually be spread out in a long belt, The dinedsicns
here are conservative far one day; thay actually

ni4i

is

nost cases I think, be even larger than this, and this Mrawa
te acale.

This is actually a scale drawing of such a dloud at

the end ef ore day; as T said, these horizontal
conservative,

extrezely flat.

spread

This shows it, as one would expect it

are |
tq be,

Now, in the case of low diffusion—and there

was somes argapent yesterday to indicate that the ¢:ffuaia:

Plane
toc
fee
“
.
.

cr: om
i

as

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