Pressure, Winds, Storms, and Cyclones Class 8 Free Notes and Mind Map (Free PDF Download)

pressure

When you see fallen leaves swirling in the air or trees bending during strong winds, you’re witnessing the power of pressure and wind forces at work. This chapter will help us study how pressure creates winds, storms, and cyclones that shape many natural phenomena and impact our daily lives. We’ll learn about pressure in liquids and gases, understand how winds form, and discover why storms and cyclones occur.

Pressure

Pressure is one of the most imp concepts in understanding how forces work around us. When Megha carries her bag comfortably while Pawan struggles with his identical bag, the difference lies in how the weight is distributed over their shoulders.

Understanding Pressure

Pressure is defined as the force applied per unit area on a surface. The mathematical formula for pressure is:

Pressure = Force / Area

The SI unit of pressure is newton per square meter (N/m²), which is also called Pascal (Pa). This unit helps us measure and compare pressure in different situations.

When you carry a bag with narrow straps, all the weight acts on a small area of your shoulders, creating high pressure that causes discomfort. But when you use broad straps, the same weight is spread over a larger area, reducing pressure and making the bag feel more comfortable.

Daily Life Examples of Pressure

Bag Straps and Handles

  • Carrying bags with broad straps feels comfortable compared to narrow straps because the pressure is distributed over a larger area
  • Lifting a water bucket with a broad handle is easier than with a narrow handle for the same reason
  • People carrying loads on their heads often place cloth underneath to increase the contact area and reduce pressure

Tools and Objects

  • Driving a nail with its pointed end is much easier than hitting the nail head because the sharp point concentrates force on a very small area, creating high pressure
  • A sharp knife cuts through objects easily because it applies high pressure on a thin edge, while a blunt knife spreads the force over a larger area
  • Needles, pins, and other sharp objects work on the same principle of concentrating force to create high pressure

Pressure in Liquids

Liquids behave differently from solids when it comes to exerting pressure. Understanding liquid pressure helps explain many everyday phenomena.

Properties of Liquid Pressure

  • Liquids exert pressure on all walls of their containers, not just at the bottom
  • The pressure exerted by a liquid depends on the height of the liquid column, not on the shape or volume of the container
  • Equal heights of liquid columns produce equal pressure at the bottom, regardless of the container’s width
  • The higher the liquid column, the greater the pressure it exerts

Practical Applications

  • Overhead water tanks are placed at considerable heights to increase water pressure in taps throughout the building
  • The higher the tank, the stronger the water flow from taps on lower floors
  • Dams are constructed with broad bases because water exerts tremendous pressure horizontally on the walls, especially near the bottom
  • The base must be strong enough to withstand this enormous pressure from the stored water

Interesting Facts About Liquid Pressure

When you make holes at the same height around a water bottle and remove the tape, water flows out in all directions with equal force. This demonstrates that liquids exert pressure in all directions, not just downward. Similarly, when water pipes develop leaks, water spurts out like fountains due to the pressure exerted by water on the pipe walls.

Pressure Exerted by Air (Atmospheric Pressure)

The air around us constantly exerts pressure in all directions, though we don’t usually notice it because we’re adapted to it. This atmospheric pressure plays a crucial role in many natural phenomena and everyday situations.

Understanding Atmospheric Pressure

Air behaves like a fluid and exerts pressure called atmospheric pressure. The atmosphere is the envelope of air surrounding Earth, containing nitrogen, oxygen, argon, carbon dioxide, and other gases. This atmosphere extends many kilometers above Earth’s surface.

Characteristics of Atmospheric Pressure

  • Air exerts pressure in all directions, not just downward
  • Atmospheric pressure varies with altitude and weather conditions
  • Higher altitudes have lower atmospheric pressure because there’s less air above
  • Weather changes are often related to changes in atmospheric pressure

Demonstrating Air Pressure

When you press a rubber sucker against a smooth surface, it sticks firmly because most air between the sucker and surface gets pushed out. The atmospheric pressure outside the sucker is now higher than the pressure inside it, making it difficult to pull off. You need to overcome this pressure difference to remove the sucker.

Magnitude of Atmospheric Pressure
The atmospheric pressure is quite substantial. Over an area of just 15 cm × 15 cm, the force exerted by atmospheric air equals the weight of approximately 225 kg. We don’t get crushed under this enormous pressure because the pressure inside our bodies balances the external atmospheric pressure.

Measuring Atmospheric Pressure

Atmospheric pressure is measured using different units:

  • Pascal (Pa) – the SI unit
  • Millibar (mb) – practical unit where 1 mb = 100 Pa
  • Hectopascal (hPa) – also equal to 100 Pa

Weather stations regularly monitor atmospheric pressure changes to predict weather patterns and storm formations.

Formation of Wind

Wind is simply air in motion, and understanding how it forms helps explain many weather phenomena from gentle breezes to powerful storms.

How Winds Form

Wind formation is based on a simple principle: air moves from areas of high pressure to areas of low pressure. This movement creates what we experience as wind.

The Process of Wind Formation

  • Uneven heating of Earth’s surface creates temperature differences
  • Warm air becomes lighter and rises, creating low-pressure areas
  • Cool air from high-pressure areas flows in to replace the rising warm air
  • This continuous process creates wind circulation patterns

Sea Breeze and Land Breeze
These daily wind patterns perfectly demonstrate pressure differences:

  • During the day, land heats up faster than water
  • Warm air above land rises, creating low pressure
  • Cool air from the sea (high pressure) flows toward land, creating sea breeze
  • At night, water stays warmer than land
  • Air above the sea rises, creating low pressure over water
  • Cool air from land flows toward the sea, creating land breeze

Wind Speed and Pressure Differences

The speed of wind depends on how great the pressure difference is between two areas. Greater pressure differences create stronger winds, while smaller differences produce gentle breezes. This relationship is crucial for understanding storm formation and weather prediction.

High-Speed Winds Result in Lowering of Air Pressure

One of the most interesting phenomena in weather science is the relationship between wind speed and air pressure. This relationship explains many dramatic weather events.

The Relationship Between Speed and Pressure

High-speed winds are always accompanied by reduced air pressure. When air moves quickly over a surface, it creates lower pressure above that surface compared to the surrounding areas. This principle explains several weather phenomena and engineering considerations.

Practical Examples

  • When you blow air between two hanging balloons, they move toward each other because the fast-moving air between them creates low pressure
  • The higher pressure surrounding the balloons pushes them together
  • Blowing harder increases the wind speed and creates even lower pressure, making the balloons move together faster

Why Roofs Get Blown Away

During storms with high-speed winds, houses can lose their roofs due to this pressure principle:

The Process

  • High-speed winds blow over house roofs, creating low pressure above them
  • The air pressure inside the house remains normal (higher than outside)
  • This pressure difference pushes the roof upward from inside
  • If the pressure difference is large and the roof is not strong enough, it gets blown away

Safety Measures

  • Keep doors and windows open during storms with high-speed winds
  • This allows air to flow through the house, equalizing pressure inside and outside
  • When pressure is equalized, there’s less force trying to lift the roof
  • This simple measure can prevent significant property damage

Storms, Thunderstorms, and Lightning

Storms represent some of nature’s most powerful displays of pressure, wind, and electrical energy working together. Understanding how they form helps us appreciate both their beauty and their danger.

Formation of Storms

Storms develop through a specific sequence of events involving heating, rising air, and pressure changes:

The Storm Formation Process

  • Land gets heated by the sun, warming the air above it
  • Warm, moist air becomes lighter and rises, creating a low-pressure area
  • Cooler air from surrounding high-pressure areas flows in to replace the rising air
  • This replacement air also gets heated and rises, creating continuous circulation
  • As rising air expands at higher altitudes, it cools down
  • Moisture in the cooling air condenses to form water droplets, creating clouds
  • Water droplets merge to form heavier drops that fall as rain, hail, or snow

Thunderstorm Development

Thunderstorms occur when storms develop under specific conditions with strong vertical air movements:

Charge Development in Clouds

  • Strong winds blow upward and downward within storm clouds
  • These winds cause water droplets and ice particles to rub against each other
  • Rubbing creates static electric charges, similar to rubbing a balloon with cloth
  • Lighter, positively charged ice particles move to the upper part of clouds
  • Heavier, negatively charged water droplets occupy the lower part of clouds
  • This creates charge separation within the cloud

Ground Charging

  • The negatively charged bottom of clouds causes the ground and nearby objects to become positively charged
  • Trees, buildings, and other tall objects develop positive charges
  • This sets up the conditions for electrical discharge

Lightning Formation

Lightning is nature’s way of balancing electrical charges that build up in storm clouds:

How Lightning Occurs

  • Normally, air acts as an electrical insulator and prevents opposite charges from meeting
  • When charge buildup becomes very large, air’s insulating property breaks down
  • A sudden flow of charges takes place, creating a bright flash of light called lightning
  • Lightning can occur within a cloud, between clouds, or between clouds and ground

Thunder Formation

  • Lightning rapidly heats the air around it to extremely high temperatures
  • This sudden heating causes air to expand explosively
  • The explosive expansion creates the loud sound we know as thunder
  • Thunder always follows lightning because light travels faster than sound

Regional Names for Thunderstorms

Different regions of India have local names for thunderstorms that occur before monsoons:

  • Kalboishakhi – West Bengal, Bihar, and Jharkhand
  • Bordoisila – Assam
  • Mango showers – Kerala, Karnataka, and Tamil Nadu (help mangoes ripen)
  • Coffee showers – Karnataka (help coffee plants grow)

Lightning Safety

Lightning can be extremely dangerous, causing fires, building damage, severe burns, or death:

Safety Measures During Lightning

  • Stay away from tall objects like trees, poles, and towers
  • Find a low-lying open area and crouch down
  • Minimize contact with the ground – don’t lie flat
  • Avoid using umbrellas with metallic rods
  • Get out of water immediately if you’re swimming or bathing
  • If you’re in a bus or car, stay inside as it’s relatively safer
  • If indoors, avoid using electrical appliances and phones

Lightning Conductors

Lightning conductors are safety devices installed on buildings during construction:

How Lightning Conductors Work

  • A metallic rod is installed along the walls of buildings
  • One end is pointed and kept higher than the building’s highest point
  • The other end is buried deep in the ground
  • The rod provides an easy path for electrical charges to flow safely into the ground
  • This protects the building and its occupants from lightning strikes

Cyclones

Cyclones are among nature’s most powerful and destructive weather phenomena. These massive spinning storm systems form over warm ocean waters and can cause devastating damage when they reach land.

Formation of Cyclones

Cyclones develop through a complex process involving ocean heating, air movement, and Earth’s rotation:

Initial Conditions

  • Cyclones form over warm ocean waters where temperatures are typically above 26°C
  • The warm ocean water heats the air above it, making it lighter
  • This warm, moist air begins to rise rapidly into the atmosphere

The Cyclone Development Process

  • As moist air rises, water vapor condenses into raindrops and ice particles
  • During condensation, heat is released back into the atmosphere (latent heat)
  • This additional heat causes the air to rise even faster, creating very low pressure
  • Air from surrounding high-pressure regions rushes in to replace the rising air
  • Earth’s rotation causes this moving air to spin (Coriolis effect)
  • The cycle repeats and intensifies, creating a spinning system of clouds, winds, and rain

Structure of a Cyclone

The Eye of the Cyclone

  • The center of a cyclone is called the “eye”
  • This is the region of lowest atmospheric pressure in the entire system
  • Surprisingly, the eye has calm winds and clear skies
  • The eye can be 20-50 kilometers in diameter

Surrounding the Eye

  • The area around the eye experiences the strongest winds and heaviest rainfall
  • Wind speeds can exceed 200 km/h in severe cyclones
  • This region contains the most dangerous and destructive weather conditions

Cyclone Movement and Intensity

From Ocean to Land

  • Cyclones move from warm ocean waters toward land
  • As they approach land, wind speeds often increase
  • The cyclone generates much stronger winds than regular thunderstorms
  • Once over land, the source of warm, moist air is cut off
  • Without this energy source, the cyclone gradually weakens

Measuring Cyclone Strength
Cyclones are classified based on their wind speeds:

CategoryWind Speed (km/h)Potential Damage
DepressionBelow 61Minimal
Deep Depression62-88Light to Moderate
Cyclonic Storm89-117Moderate to Severe
Severe Cyclonic Storm118-166Severe to Devastating
Very Severe Cyclonic Storm167-221Devastating
Super Cyclonic StormAbove 222Catastrophic

Destructive Effects of Cyclones

Wind Damage

  • Strong winds can reach speeds of 270 km/h (like Cyclone Amphan in 2020)
  • These winds can uproot massive trees and destroy buildings
  • Power lines get damaged, causing widespread electricity outages
  • Flying debris becomes dangerous projectiles

Storm Surge

  • Strong winds push ocean water toward the shore
  • This creates a wall of water that can be 3-12 meters high
  • Storm surge can flood coastal areas and penetrate far inland
  • This is often the most deadly aspect of cyclones

Heavy Rainfall

  • Cyclones bring torrential rainfall that can last for days
  • Excessive rain causes rivers to overflow and flood large areas
  • Waterlogged conditions can trigger landslides in hilly regions
  • Urban areas may experience severe flooding due to poor drainage

Long-term Impacts

  • Seawater intrusion contaminates freshwater sources
  • Salt in seawater makes agricultural soil less fertile
  • Crops get destroyed, affecting food security
  • Roads become blocked by fallen trees and debris
  • Recovery can take months or even years

Cyclone Tracking and Prediction

Modern technology has greatly improved our ability to track and predict cyclones:

Monitoring Systems

  • Weather satellites continuously monitor ocean temperatures and cloud formations
  • Radar systems track cyclone movement and intensity
  • Computer models predict probable paths and wind speeds
  • The India Meteorological Department (IMD) issues regular warnings and alerts

International Cooperation

  • Multiple countries and organizations work together
  • Information is shared rapidly across national boundaries
  • This cooperation helps in providing early warnings to affected areas
  • International aid and disaster response teams coordinate relief efforts

Cyclone Preparedness and Safety

Before a Cyclone

  • Stay updated with weather reports and official warnings
  • Prepare an emergency kit with essential supplies (food, water, medicines, flashlight, batteries)
  • Secure loose objects around your home that could become flying debris
  • Know the location of nearby cyclone shelters

During a Cyclone

  • Move to designated cyclone shelters if advised by authorities
  • Stay indoors and away from windows and doors
  • Avoid going outside even if the weather seems calm (you might be in the eye)
  • Keep battery-powered radio for emergency updates

After a Cyclone

  • Wait for official clearance before going outside
  • Be careful of fallen power lines and damaged structures
  • Drink only boiled or bottled water to avoid contamination
  • Help neighbors and community members as needed

Climate Change and Cyclones

Climate change is affecting cyclone patterns in several ways:

  • Rising ocean temperatures may increase cyclone intensity
  • Sea level rise makes storm surge more dangerous
  • Changing weather patterns may alter cyclone frequencies and paths
  • Scientists continue studying these complex relationships

Summary of Imp Concepts

Understanding pressure, winds, storms, and cyclones helps us comprehend many natural phenomena and prepare for extreme weather events.

Basic Principles

Pressure Fundamentals

  • Pressure equals force divided by area (P = F/A)
  • Reducing area increases pressure, making tools more effective
  • Liquids and gases exert pressure in all directions
  • Liquid pressure depends on column height, not container shape

Wind and Weather

  • Air moves from high-pressure to low-pressure areas
  • Temperature differences create pressure differences and wind
  • High-speed winds are associated with low pressure
  • This principle explains many weather phenomena

Storm Development

  • Storms form when warm, moist air rises and creates low pressure
  • Cooling air condenses moisture into clouds and precipitation
  • Strong vertical air movements create electrical charges
  • Lightning balances these electrical charges dramatically

Cyclone Formation

  • Warm ocean waters provide energy for cyclone formation
  • Earth’s rotation causes the spinning motion
  • The eye of the cyclone has the lowest pressure but calm winds
  • Cyclones weaken over land but can cause extensive damage

Practical Applications

ConceptApplicationExample
Pressure DistributionComfort and EfficiencyBroad bag straps, sharp knives
Liquid PressureWater SupplyOverhead tanks, dam construction
Atmospheric PressureSafety DevicesSuction cups, barometric pressure
Wind FormationDaily WeatherSea breeze, land breeze patterns
Lightning SafetyProtectionLightning conductors, safety measures
Cyclone PredictionDisaster ManagementWeather satellites, early warning systems

These concepts help us understand natural phenomena, design better tools and structures, and protect ourselves from dangerous weather events. The study of pressure, winds, storms, and cyclones connects physics principles with real-world applications that affect millions of people daily.

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