diff --git a/notebooks/5-skewt.ipynb b/notebooks/5-skewt.ipynb index 4d7eee3..1188a35 100644 --- a/notebooks/5-skewt.ipynb +++ b/notebooks/5-skewt.ipynb @@ -52,9 +52,9 @@ "\n", "1. **Temperature Lines** are drawn at an angle up from the x-axis and are where the name \"Skew-T\" comes from.\n", "2. **Pressure Lines** are horizontal from the y-axis, where pressure is plotted at a logarithmic scale.\n", - "3. **Dry Adiabats**: are lines of constant potential temperature.\n", - "4. **Moist Adiabats**: are lines of constant equivalent potential temperature.\n", - "5. **Mixing Ratio Lines**: represent lines of constant mixing ratio.\n", + "3. **Dry Adiabats**: are lines of constant potential temperature as hypotethical air with no moisture content rises isentropically (with constant entropy).\n", + "4. **Moist Adiabats**: are lines of constant equivalent potential temperature - the change in temperature of fully saturated air as it rises, undergoing cooling due to adiabatic expansion.\n", + "5. **Mixing Ratio Lines**: represent lines of constant mixing ratio, the mass of water vapor relative to the mass of dry air.\n", "\n", "On all those structural elements, Skew-T plots have two lines plotted on them, **air temperature** and **dew point**. In this notebook, we'll be plotting the air temperature in red and the dew point in blue.\n", "\n", @@ -197,13 +197,7 @@ "metadata": {}, "source": [ "### Adding more structural elements\n", - "Next, let's add the rest of the structural elements to the plot.\n", - "\n", - "We'll add:\n", - "\n", - " - **Dry Adiabats** which depict constant potential temperature as hypotethical air with no moisture content rises isentropically (with constant entropy).\n", - " - **Mosit Adiabats** which depict the change in temperature of fully saturated air as it rises, undergoing cooling due to adiabatic expansion.\n", - " - **Mixing Ratios** which depict the mass of water vapor relative to the mass of dry air (where it crosses with the dew point temperature line)" + "Next, let's add the rest of the structural elements to the plot." ] }, {