The varying environmental lapse rates throughout the Earth's atmosphere are of critical importance in
meteorology, particularly within the
troposphere. They are used to determine if the
parcel of rising air will rise high enough for its water to condense to form
clouds, and, having formed clouds, whether the air will continue to rise and form bigger shower clouds, and whether these clouds will get even bigger and form
cumulonimbus clouds (thunder clouds). As unsaturated air rises, its temperature drops at the dry adiabatic rate. The
dew point also drops (as a result of decreasing air pressure) but much more slowly, typically about per 1,000 m. If unsaturated air rises far enough, eventually its temperature will reach its
dew point, and condensation will begin to form. This altitude is known as the
lifting condensation level (LCL) when mechanical lift is present and the
convective condensation level (CCL) when mechanical lift is absent, in which case, the parcel must be heated from below to its
convective temperature. The
cloud base will be somewhere within the layer bounded by these parameters. The difference between the dry adiabatic lapse rate and the rate at which the
dew point drops is around per 1,000 m. Given a difference in temperature and
dew point readings on the ground, one can easily find the LCL by multiplying the difference by 125 m/°C. If the environmental lapse rate is less than the moist adiabatic lapse rate, the air is absolutely stable — rising air will cool faster than the surrounding air and lose
buoyancy. This often happens in the early morning, when the air near the ground has cooled overnight. Cloud formation in stable air is unlikely. If the environmental lapse rate is between the moist and dry adiabatic lapse rates, the air is conditionally unstable — an unsaturated parcel of air does not have sufficient buoyancy to rise to the LCL or CCL, and it is stable to weak vertical displacements in either direction. If the parcel is saturated it is unstable and will rise to the LCL or CCL, and either be halted due to an
inversion layer of
convective inhibition, or if lifting continues, deep, moist convection (DMC) may ensue, as a parcel rises to the
level of free convection (LFC), after which it enters the
free convective layer (FCL) and usually rises to the
equilibrium level (EL). If the environmental lapse rate is larger than the dry adiabatic lapse rate, it has a superadiabatic lapse rate, the air is absolutely unstable — a parcel of air will gain buoyancy as it rises both below and above the lifting condensation level or convective condensation level. This often happens in the afternoon mainly over land masses. In these conditions, the likelihood of
cumulus clouds, showers or even
thunderstorms is increased. Meteorologists use
radiosondes to measure the environmental lapse rate and compare it to the predicted adiabatic lapse rate to forecast the likelihood that air will rise. Charts of the environmental lapse rate are known as
thermodynamic diagrams, examples of which include
Skew-T log-P diagrams and
tephigrams. (See also
Thermals). The difference in moist adiabatic lapse rate and the dry rate is the cause of
foehn wind phenomenon (also known as "
Chinook winds" in parts of North America). The phenomenon exists because warm moist air rises through
orographic lifting up and over the top of a mountain range or large mountain. The temperature decreases with the dry adiabatic lapse rate, until it hits the dew point, where water vapor in the air begins to condense. Above that altitude, the adiabatic lapse rate decreases to the moist adiabatic lapse rate as the air continues to rise. Condensation is also commonly followed by
precipitation on the top and
windward sides of the mountain. As the air descends on the leeward side, it is warmed by
adiabatic compression at the dry adiabatic lapse rate. Thus, the foehn wind at a certain altitude is warmer than the corresponding altitude on the windward side of the mountain range. In addition, because the air has lost much of its original water vapor content, the descending air creates an
arid region on the leeward side of the mountain. == Impact on the greenhouse effect ==