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METEOROLOGY
Question Bank

Sr.no Topic Page no:


1. Constituents of Atmosphere 3-13
2. Pressure 13-29
3. Temperature 29-37
4. Density 37-38
5. Humidity` 39-41
6. Winds 42-55
7. Stability & Instability 55-60
8. Clouds 60-70
9. Precipitation 70-74
10. Visibility 75-78
11. Icing 78-85
12. Thunderstorm 86-93
13. Clear Air Turbulence 93-96
14. Jet Streams 97-102
15. Mountain Waves 103
16. Air Mass 104-108
17. Fronts 108-112
18. Inter-Tropical Convergence Zone 112
(ITCZ)
19. Tropical Revolving Storms 113-115
21. Indian Climatology 116-120
22. MET Reports 121-136
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Constituents of Atmosphere

1) How does the height of the tropopause normally vary with latitude in the northern hemisphere?
A. It remains constant throughout the year.
B. It decreases from south to north.
C. It remains constant from north to south.
D. It increases from south to north.
2) How would you characterise an air temperature of -15°C at the 700 hPa level over western Europe?
A. Low
B. High
C. Within +/-5°C of ISA
D. 20°C below standard
3) An isothermal layer is a layer of air in which the temperature
A. decreases with height at a constant rate
B. increases with height at a constant rate
C. remains constant with height
D. increases with height
4) A layer in which the temperature remains constant with height is
A. unstable
B. neutral
C. conditionally unstable
D. absolutely stable
5) What is the boundary layer between troposphere and stratosphere called?
A. Tropopause.
B. Ionosphere.
C. Stratosphere.
D. Atmosphere.
6) Where, in central Europe, are the highest wind speeds to be found ?
A. Close to the ground
B. In the stratosphere
C. Just below the tropopause
D. At about 5500 metres altitude
7) Which is true of the temperature at the tropopause?
A. It is higher in polar regions than in equatorial regions
B. It is higher in equatorial regions than in polar regions
C. It is highest in middle latitudes
D. There is no significant difference with change of latitude
4

8) How does temperature vary with increasing altitude in the ICAO standard atmosphere below the
tropopause?
A. Increases
B. At first it increases and higher up it decreases
C. Remains constant
D. Decreases
9) The tropopause is a level at which
A. water vapour content is greatest
B. pressure remains constant
C. vertical currents are strongest
D. temperature ceases to fall with increasing height
10) The troposphere is the
A. part of the atmosphere below the tropopause
B. part of the atmosphere above the stratosphere
C. boundary between the mesosphere and thermosphere
D. boundary between the stratosphere and the mesosphere
11) An inversion is
A. a decrease of pressure with height
B. a decrease of temperature with height
C. an increase of temperature with height
D. an increase of pressure with height
12) A layer in which the temperature decreases with 1°C per 100m is
A. absolutely stable
B. absolutely unstable
C. conditionally unstable
D. neutral for dry air
13) How would you characterise an air temperature of -55°C at the 200 hPa level over western
Europe?
A. Within +/-5°C of ISA
B. High
C. Low
D. Very high
14) Which of the following cloud types can project up into the stratosphere?
A. Cumulonimbus
B. Cirrostratus
C. Altocumulus
D. Altostratus
15) The lowest assumed temperature in the International Standard Atmosphere (ISA) is :
A. -273°C
B. -44.7°C
C. -100°C
D. -56.5°C
5

16) At FL 180, the air temperature is -35°C.The air density at this level is:
A. Equal to the density of the ISA atmosphere at FL 180.
B. Unable to be determined without knowing the QNH.
C. Greater than the density of the ISA atmosphere at FL 180.
D. Less than the density of the ISA atmosphere at FL 180.
17) An inversion is a layer of air in which the temperature
A. remains constant with height
B. increases with height more than 1°C/100m
C. decreases with height more than 1°C/100m
D. increases with height
18) A layer is absolutely unstable if the temperature decrease with height is
A. less than 0.65°C per 100m
B. more than 1°C per 100m
C. between 1°C per 100m and 0.65° C per 100m
D. 0.65°C per 100m
19) The stable layer at some height in the low troposphere of an older high pressure area in the mid-
latitudes is called
A. radiation inversion
B. trade wind inversion
C. subsidence inversion
D. friction inversion
20) Compare the following TAF and VOLMET reports for Nice: TAF 240716 VRB02KT CAVOK =
0920Z 13012KT 8000 SCT040CB BKN100 20/18 Q1015 TEMPO TS = What can be concluded from
the differences between the two reports?
A. That the weather at Nice is clearly more volatile than the TAF could have predicted earlier in
the morning
B. That the weather conditions at 0920 were actually predicted in the TAF
C. That the weather in Nice after 0920 is also likely to be as predicted in the TAF
D. That the VOLMET speaker has got his locations mixed up, because there is no way the latest
VOLMET report could be so different from the TAF
21) The temperature at FL 160 is -22°C. What will the temperature be at FL 90 if the ICAO standard
lapse rate is applied?
A. +4°C
B. -8°C
C. -4°C
D. 0°C
22) Which one of the following statements applies to the tropopause?
A. It is, by definition, an isothermal layer
B. It indicates a strong temperature lapse rate
C. It is, by definition, a temperature inversion
D. It separates the troposphere from the stratosphere
6

23) A layer in which the temperature increases with height is


A. conditionally unstable
B. neutral
C. absolutely stable
D. absolutely unstable
24) Which statement is correct regarding the International Standard Atmosphere ?
A. At MSL temperature is 15°C and the decrease in temperature with height is 1°C per 100m
B. At MSL temperature is 10°C and the decrease in temperature with height is 1°C per 100m
C. At MSL pressure is 1013.25 hPa and the decrease of temperature with height is 1°C per 100m
D. At MSL temperature is 15°C and pressure is 1013.25hPa
25) What is the most likely temperature at the tropical tropopause?
A. -55°C.
B. -35°C.
C. -25°C.
D. -75°C.
26) In a layer of air the decrease in temperature per 100 metres increase in height is more than 1°C.
This layer can be described as being
A. conditionally stable
B. absolutely unstable
C. absolutely stable
D. conditionally unstable
27) A vertical spacing of 1000 FT, is the standard required separation between two FL. Under
conditions of cold air advection (ISA -15°C), what would the true vertical separation be?
A. It remains 1000 FT
B. More than 1000 FT
C. Without QNH information, it cannot be determined
D. Less than 1000 FT
28) The tropopause is lower
A. south of the equator than north of it
B. over the equator than over the South Pole
C. over the North Pole than over the equator
D. in summer than winter in moderate latitudes
29) What, approximately, is the average height of the tropopause over the equator ?
A. 16 km
B. 8 km
C. 11 km
D. 40 km
30) (For this question use annex 050-4373A) What is the deviation of the temperature at FL 140
above Copenhagen compared to ISA?
A. 12°C colder than ISA
B. 8°C colder than ISA C 4°
C. warmer than ISA
7

D. 8°C warmer than ISA


31) Going from the equator to the north pole, the altitude of the tropopause
A. decreases and its temperature increases
B. increases and its temperature increases
C. increases and its temperature decreases
D. decreases and its temperature decreases
32) An inversion is
A. an absolutely stable layer
B. a conditionally unstable layer
C. an unstable layer
D. a layer that can be either stable or unstable
33) In the troposphere the decrease of pressure per 100 m increase in height
A. is smaller at higher levels than at lower levels.
B. remains constant at all levels.
C. is greater at higher levels than at lower levels.
D. is in the order of 27 hPa near MSL.
34) The thickness of the troposphere varies with
A. rotation of the earth
B. the wind
C. latitude
D. longitude
35) The decrease in temperature, per 100 metres, in a saturated rising parcel of air at lower level of the
atmosphere is approximately
A. 1°C
B. 1.5°C
C. 0.35°C
D. 0.6°C
36) The troposphere
A. reaches the same height at all latitudes
B. has a greater vertical extent above the equator than above the poles
C. contains all oxygen of the stratosphere
D. is the separation layer between the stratosphere and atmosphere
37) The following temperatures have been observed over a station at 1200 UTC. Assume the station is
at MSL. Height in feet. Temperature in degrees C. 20000.-12 18000.-11 16000.-10 14000.-10 12000.-
6 10000.-2 8000. +2 6000. +6 4000. +12 2000. +15 surface+15.
A. Assuming that the MSL pressure is 1013.25 hPa the true altitude of an aircraft would actually
be higher than the indicated altitude.
B. The height of the freezing level over the station is approximately 12000 FT.
C. The temperature at 10000 FT is in agreement with the temperature in the International Standard
Atmosphere.
D. The layer between 16000 and 18000 FT is absolutely unstable
8

38) Which layer of the atmosphere contains more than 90 per cent of all water vapour?
A. Troposphere
B. Lower stratosphere
C. Upper stratosphere
D. Ionosphere
39) If the surface temperature is 15°C , then the temperature at 10000 FT in a current of ascending
unsaturated air is:
A. 5°C
B. -5°C
C. -15°C
D. 0°C
40) In the International Standard Atmosphere the decrease in temperature with height below 11 km is
A. 0.6°C per 100m
B. 0.65°C per 100m
C. 1°C per 100m
D. 0.5°C per 100m
41) In the mid-latitudes the stratosphere extends on an average from
A. 85 to more than 200 km
B. 11 to 50 km
C. 0 to 11 km
D. 50 to 85 km
42) An outside air temperature of -35°C is measured while cruising at FL 200. What is the temperature
deviation from the ISA at this level?
A. 10°C warmer than ISA.
B. 5°C warmer than ISA.
C. 5°C colder than ISA.
D. 10°C colder than ISA.
43) What is the vertical temperature lapse rate, up to 11 km, in the standard ICAO atmosphere?
A. 6.5°C per 1000 m
B. 4.5°C per 1000 m
C. 3°C per 1000 m
D. 2°C per 1000 m
44) What of the following is the most important constituent in the atmosphere from a weather stand-
point?
A. Nitrogen
B. Oxygen
C. Hydrogen
D. Water vapour
45) The height and the temperature of the tropopause are respectively in the order of
A. 8 km and -40°C over the equator
B. 8 km and - 75°C over the poles
C. 16 km and -40°C over the poles
9

D. 16 km and -75°C over the equator


46) What is the approximate composition of the dry air by volume in the troposphere ?
A. 50 % oxygen, 40 % nitrogen, and the rest other gasses
B. 21 % oxygen, 78 % nitrogen, and the rest other gasses
C. 10 % oxygen, 89 % nitrogen, and the rest other gasses
D. 88 % oxygen, 9 % nitrogen, and the rest other gasses
47) The rate of decrease of temperature with height per 100 m in the International Standard Atmosphere
is :
A. 0.65°C
B. 1°C C
C. 0.5°C
D. variable
48) Which of the following statements concerning the lifting of a parcel of air is correct?
A. Saturated parcel always cool at a rate of 0.65°C per 100m
B. Unsaturated parcels cool more rapidly than saturated parcels
C. Unsaturated parcels cool less rapidly than saturated parcels
D. Unsaturated parcels cool at a rate of 0.65°C per 100m
49) The height and the temperature of the tropopause are respectively in the order of
A. 8 km and -40°C over the equator
B. 8 km and - 75°C over the poles
C. 16 km and -40°C over the poles
D. 16 km and -75°C over the equator

50. Lowest layer of atmosphere is


a. Troposphere
b. Tropopause
c. Stratosphere

51. Height of Tropopause at equator is


a) 10-12 km
b) 16-18 km
c) 12-14 km

52. Height of Tropopause at Poles is


a) 12-14 km
b) 12-13 km
c) 08-10 km

53. Higher the surface temperature would be the tropopause


a) Higher
10

b) Lower
c) Same

54. Height of tropopause


a) Is constant
b) Varies with altitude
c) Varies with Latitude

55. Above 8 km the lower temperatures are over


a) Equator
b) Mid Latitudes
c) Poles

56. Tropos means


a) Turning
b) Under current
c) Convection

57. CO2 and H2O are also called ...


a) Green House Gases
b) Rare Earth Gases

58. Troposphere is generally


a) Stable
b) Unstable
c) Neutral

59. Stratosphere is
a) Unstable
b) Neutral
c) Stable

60. Tropopause is discontinuous at about


a) 30°lat
b) 40°Iat
c) 60°lat
11

61. Most of atmospheric mass is contained in ...


a) Troposphere
b) Stratosphere
c) Heterosphere

62. Stratosphere extends from Tropopause to


a) 50 km
b) 60 km
c) 40 km

63. The middle atmosphere layer characterised by temperature inversion and stability...
a) Troposphere
b) Tropopause
c) Stratosphere

64. Mother of pearl clouds occur in………….


a) Mesosphere
b) Thermosphere
c) Stratosphere

65. The temperature in ISA at 17 km is ..


a) -56.5°C
b) -65.5° C
c) -35.5° C

66. By weight, approximate ratio of O2 to N2 in the atmosphere is


a) 1:3
b) 1:4
c) 1:5

67. By volume, the approximate ratio of O2 to N2 in the atmosphere is


a) 1:3
b) 1:4
c) 1:5

68. By volume, the proportion CO2 in the atmosphere is


a) 3%
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b) 0.3%
c) 0.03%

69. In ISA, the mean sea level temperature is


a) 15° C
b) 10° C
c) 25°C

70. Maximum concentration of ozone is at 3 height of


a) 10-15 km
b) 20-25 km
c) 30-35 km

71. Additional oxygen is needed while flying above


a) 5000 ft
b) 7000 ft
c) 10000 ft

72. CO2 and H2O keep the atmosphere


a) Warm
b) Cold
c) Have no effect

73. Noctilucent clouds occur in


a) Thermosphere
b) Mesosphere
c) Stratosphere

74. Temperature at 2 km is 05 °C what is ISA deviation


a) -05°C
b) -02° C
c) -03°C

75. Pressure at MSL is 1002.25 hPa. Find the ISA deviation


a) 11 hPa
b) 10 hPa
c) 12 hPa
13

76. In actual atmosphere temp, at 19 km is -60°C. How much it differs from ISA
a) -4.5°C
b) -05.5° C
c) -03.5°C

Pressure

77 ) The QNH is equal to the QFE if


A. the elevation = 0
B. T actual = T standard
C. T actual > T standard
D. T actual < T standard
78) A 500 hPa pressure level can vary in height. In temperate regions which of the following average
heights is applicable ?
A. FL 160
B. FL 100
C. FL 390
D. FL 180
79) A trough of low pressure on a surface synoptic chart is an area of
A. convergence and subsidence
B. convergence and widespread ascent
C. divergence and subsidence
D. divergence and widespread ascent
80) The QNH at an airfield located 200 metres above sea level is 1022 hPa. The air temperature is not
available. What is the QFF?
A. It is not possible to give a definitive answer
B. More than 1022 hPa
C. 1022 hPa
D. Less than 1022 hPa
81) Which constant pressure altitude chart is standard for a 4781 FT pressure level (FL50)?
A. 300 hPa.
B. 850 hPa.
C. 700 hPa.
D. 500 hPa.
82) Half the mass of the atmosphere is found in the first
A. 5 km
B. 3 km
C. 8 km
D. 11 km
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83) What will be the effect on the reading of an altimeter of an aircraft parked on the ground during
the period following the passage of an active cold front ?
A. It will show a small increase or decrease.
B. It will have decreased.
C. It will remain unchanged.
D. It will have increased.
84) The reason for the fact, that the Icelandic low is normally deeper in winter than in summer is that
A. the temperature contrasts between arctic and equatorial areas are much greater in winter.
B. the low-pressure activity of the sea east of Canada is higher in winter.
C. the strong winds of the north Atlantic in winter are favourable for the development of lows.
D. converging air currents are of greater intensity in winter.
85) An aircraft lands at an airport (airport elevation 1240 FT, QNH 1008 hPa). The altimeter is set to
1013 hPa. The altimeter will indicate:
A. 1375 FT.
B. 1200 FT.
C. 1105 FT.
D. 1280 FT.
86) Which constant pressure altitude chart is standard for a 38662 FT pressure level (FL 390) ?
A. 500 hPa
B. 700 hPa
C. 200 hPa
D. 300 hPa
87) The station pressure used in surface weather charts is
A. QNE
B. QFF
C. QFE
D. QNH
88) During a flight over the sea at FL 100 from Marseille (QNH 1012 hPa) to Palma de Mallorca
(QNH 1012 hPa), the true altitude is constantly increasing. What action, if any, should be taken ?
A. Compensate by heading further to the left
B. None, the reason for the change is that the air around Palma is warmer than the air around
Marseille
C. Have your altimeter checked, because its readings are obviously wrong
D. Recheck the QNH because one of the QNH values must be wrong
89) For a given airfield the QFE is 980 hPa and the QNH is 1000 hPa. The approximate elevation of
the airfield is
A. 120 metres
B. 160 metres
C. 600 metres
D. 540 metres
15

90) Select the true statement concerning isobars and wind flow patterns around high- and low-
pressure systems that are shown on a surface weather chart.
A. Isobars connect contour lines of equal temperature.
B. When the isobars are far apart, crest of standing waves may be marked by stationary
lenticular clouds.
C. When the isobars are close together, the pressure gradient force is greater and wind velocities
are stronger.
D. Surface winds flow perpendicular to the isobars.
91) The QFF at an airfield located 400 metres above sea level is 1016 hPa. The air temperature is
10°C higher than a standard atmosphere. What is the QNH?
A. More than 1016 hPa
B. 1016 hPa
C. Less than 1016 hPa
D. It is not possible to give a definitive answer
92) What are the meteorological prerequisites, at low level, for thunderstorms formed by lifting
processes, over land?
A. High air pressure (> 1013 hPa), high temperatures.
B. Low temperatures, low humidity.
C. Subsidence, inversion.
D. High temperatures, high humidity.
93) When planning a flight at FL 60, which upper wind and temperature chart would be nearest your
flight level?
A. 300 hPa
B. 850 hPa
C. 700 hPa
D. 500 hPa
94) What is the relationship, if any, between QFE and QNH at an airport situated 50 FT below sea
level?
A. QFE equals QNH.
B. No clear relationship exists.
C. QFE is greater than QNH.
D. QFE is smaller than QNH.
95) If atmospheric conditions exist such that the temperature deviation is ISA +10°C in the lower
troposphere up to 18000 FT, what is the actual layer thickness between FL 60 and FL 120 ?
A. 5760 FT.
B. 6240 FT.
C. 6000 FT.
D. 5900 FT.
96) Which of the following is true concerning atmospheric pressure ?
A. It always decreases with height at a rate of 1 hPa per 8m
B. It decreases with height
C. It is higher in winter than in summer
D. It is higher at night than during the day
16

97) Considering the North Atlantic region between 30°N and 65°N and the adjacent land areas during
mid-summer, the predominant pressure systems are
A. Azores high and weak low over NE Canada
B. Scandinavian high and Azores high
C. weak low over NE Canada and Scandinavian high
D. Azores low and Icelandic high
98) In temperate latitudes what weather conditions may be expected over land during the summer in
the centre of a stationary high pressure zone ?
A. NS.
B. Calm winds, haze.
C. TS, SH.
D. CB, TS.
99) Around Paris on January 3rd at 1800 UTC, the surface temperature, under shelter, is 3°C. The sky
is covered by 8 oktas of stratus. QNH is 1033 hPa. If the sky is covered all night, the minimum
temperature of the night of January 3rd to January 4th should be
A. slightly below +3°C.
B. significantly below 0°C.
C. slightly above +3°C.
D. significantly above +3°C.
100) Which of the following conditions gives the highest value of the QNH?
A. QFE = 995 hPa, elevation = 1200 FT (366m)
B. QFE = 995 hPa, elevation = 1600 FT (488m)
C. QFE = 1000 hPa, elevation = 1200 FT (366m)
D. QFE = 1003 hPa, elevation = 1200 FT (366m)
101) A 700 hPa pressure level can vary in height. In temperate regions which of the following average
heights is applicable?
A. FL 180
B. FL 300
C. FL 390
D. FL 100
102) Which statement is true ?
A. QNH can be 1013.25 only for a station at MSL
B. QNH can be lower as well as higher than 1013.25 hPa
C. QNH can not be 1013.25 hPa
D. QNH is lower than 1013.25 hPa at any time
103) An aircraft is flying over the sea at FL 90; the true altitude is 9100 feet; local QNH is unknown.
What assumption, if any, can be made about the air mass in which the aircraft is flying ?
A. It is colder than ISA
B. It is warmer than ISA
C. Its average temperature is the same as ISA
D. There is insufficient information to make any assumption
17

104) An aircraft is flying at FL 80. The local QNH is 1000 hPa. After the second altimeter has been
adjusted to the local QNH, the reading will be approximately
A. 8350 FT.
B. 8000 FT.
C. 7650 FT.
D. 8600 FT.
105) What type of air movement is associated with the centre line of a trough?
A. Divergence with descending air.
B. Divergence with lifting.
C. Convergence with descending air.
D. Convergence with lifting.
106) When the subscale is set to the QNH of an airfield the pressure altimeter indicates
A. elevation while landing only if conditions are as in the International Standard Atmosphere
B. zero while landing only if conditions are as in the International Standard Atmosphere
C. elevation while landing
D. zero while landing
107) A parcel of unsaturated air is lifted to just below the condensation level and then returned to its
original level. What is the final temperature of the parcel of air?
A. It depends upon the QFE.
B. The same as the starting temperature.
C. Higher than the starting temperature.
D. Lower than the starting temperature.
108) At a certain position, the temperature on the 300 hPa chart is -48°C; according to the tropopause
chart, the tropopause is at FL 330. What is the most likely temperature at FL 350 ?
A. -54°C.
B. -50°C.
C. -56,5°C.
D. -58°C.
109) The isobars drawn on a surface weather chart represent lines of equal pressure
A. at flight level
B. at height of observatory
C. at a determined density altitude
D. reduced to sea level
110) The pressure altitude is equal to the true altitude if
A. the outside air temperature is standard for that height
B. the air pressure is 1013.25 hPa at the surface
C. the indicated altitude is equal to the pressure altitude
D. standard atmospheric conditions occur
18

111) During the climb after take-off, the altimeter setting is adjusted at the transition altitude. If the
local QNH is 1023 hPa, what will happen to the altimeter reading during the resetting procedure ?
A. It is not possible to give a definitive answer
B. It will decrease
C. It will increase
D. It will remain the same
112) Subsidence is :
A. vertically upwards motion of air
B. the same as convection
C. vertically downwards motion of air
D. horizontal motion of air
113) During a flight at FL 100 from Marseille (QNH 1012 hPa) to Palma de Mallorca (QNH 1015
hPa), an aircraft remains at a constant true altitude. The reason for this is that :
A. the altimeters are erroneous, and need to be tested.
B. the air at Marseille is colder than that at Palma de Mallorca.
C. one of the two QNH values may be incorrect.
D. the air at Marseille is warmer than that at Palma de Mallorca.
114) During a flight over the sea at FL 100 from Marseille (QNH 1016 hPa) to Palma de Mallorca
(QNH 1016 hPa), the true altitude is constantly decreasing. What is the probable reason for this ?
A. The aircraft is being blown off track to the left
B. The air at Marseille is warmer than that at Palma de Mallorca
C. One of the QNH values must be wrong
D. The altimeter is faulty
114) If the QFE at Locarno (200 metres above sea level) is 1000 hPa, what is the approximate QNH?
A. 1025 hPa
B. 985 hPa
C. 990 hPa
D. 1035hPa
115) What information is required to convert a minimum safe altitude into a lowest usable flight
level?
A. Highest value of QNH and the highest positive temperature deviation from ISA
B. Lowest value of QNH and the lowest negative temperature deviation from ISA
C. Lowest value of QNH and the highest negative temperature deviation from ISA.
D. Highest value of QNH and the highest negative temperature deviation from ISA.
116) The barometric compensator of an altimeter is locked on reference 1013.2 hPa. The aircraft has
to land on a point with an elevation of 290 feet where the QNH is 1023 hPa. Assuming that 1 hPa
corresponds to 27 FT, the reading on the altimeter on the ground will be:
A. 560 FT.
B. 20 FT.
C. 11 FT.
D. -10 FT.
19

117) Which of the following conditions would cause the altimeter to indicate a lower altitude than that
actually flown ?
A. Air temperature higher than standard
B. Atmospheric pressure lower than standard
C. Pressure altitude the same as indicated altitude.
D. Air temperature lower than standard.

118) During the climb after take-off, the altimeter setting is adjusted at the transition altitude. If the
local QNH is 966 hPa, what will happen to the altimeter reading during the resetting procedure?
A. It is not possible to give a definitive answer
B. It will increase
C. It will decrease
D. It will remain the same
119) If you are planning a flight at FL 170, which of these upper wind and temperature charts would
be nearest your flight level?
A. 850 hPa
B. 700 hPa
C. 500 hPa
D. 300 hPa
120) A 850 hPa pressure level can vary in height. In temperate regions which of the following average
heights is applicable ?
A. FL100
B. FL 300
C. FL 390
D. FL 50
121) Which constant pressure altitude chart is standard for a 18289 FT pressure level (FL 180) ?
A. 300 hPa
B. 200 hPa
C. 700 hPa
D. 500 hPa
122) If the QNH at Locarno (200 metres above sea level) is 1025 hPa, what is the approximate QFE?
A. 1000 hPa
B. 995 hPa
C. 1005 hPa
D. 1025 hPa
123) If you are flying at FL 100 in an air mass that is 10°C warmer than a standard atmosphere, what
is the outside temperature likely to be?
A. -10°C
B. -15°C
C. +5°C
D. +15°C
20

124) In what hPa range is an upper weather chart for FL 340 situated?
A. 400 - 300 hPa
B. 500 - 400 hPa
C. 600 - 500 hPa
125) In Geneva, the local QNH is 994 hPa. The elevation of Geneva is 1411 FT. The QFE adjustment
in Geneva is
A. 942 hPa.
B. 967 hPa.
C. 961 hPa.
D. 948 hPa.
126) Select the answer which you consider will complete correctly the following statement in relation
to the main pressure systems affecting the North Atlantic region between 30°N and 65°N. During
winter the predominant mean low pressure system at the surface is usually centred over
A. Siberia
B. Azores
C. Iceland / Greenland
D. USA
127) In a low pressure system the convergence at the surface is caused by
A. the curvature of the isobars
B. frictional forces
C. centripetal forces
D. the in balance of the horizontal gradient force and the Coriolis force
128) An aircraft is flying over the sea at FL 120, with a true altitude of 12000 feet; local QNH is 1013
hPa. What assumption, if any, can be made about the air mass in which the aircraft is flying ?
A. It is warmer than ISA
B. There is insufficient information to come to any conclusion
C. Its average temperature is the same as ISA
D. It is colder than ISA
129) The QFF at an airfield located 400 metres above sea level is 1016 hPa. The air temperature is
10°C lower than a standard atmosphere. What is the QNH?
A. More than 1016 hPa
B. 1016 hPa
C. It is not possible to give a definitive answer
D. Less than 1016 hPa
130) An aircraft lands at an airport (airport elevation 540 FT, QNH 993 hPa) with the altimeter set to
1013 hPa. What will it indicate ?
A. 380 FT
B. 0 FT
C. 1080 FT
D. 700 FT
131) QNH is defined as
A. pressure at MSL in the standard atmosphere
21

B. pressure at MSL in the actual atmosphere


C. QFE reduced to MSL using the values of the actual atmosphere
D. QFE reduced to MSL using the values of the standard atmosphere
132) Isobars on a surface chart are lines of equal
A. QFF
B. QFE
C. QNE
D. QNH
133) You are flying from east to west in the northern hemisphere at the 500 hPa pressure surface. Which
of the following statements is correct?
A. If the wind is from the south you are gaining altitude
B. If you have a head wind you are gaining altitude
C. If you have a tail wind you are losing altitude
D. If the wind is from the north you are gaining altitude
134) The QNH of an airport at sea level is 983 hPa and the temperature deviation from ISA is -15°C
below FL 100. What is the true altitude of FL 100?
A. 8590 FT.
B. 10210 FT.
C. 9790 FT.
D. 11410 FT.
135) The QNH at an airfield located 200 metres above sea level is 1009 hPa. The air temperature is
10°C lower than a standard atmosphere. What is the QFF?
A. Less than 1009 hPa
B. It is not possible to give a definitive answer
C. More than 1009 hPa
D. 1009 hPa
136) In the southern hemisphere what wind effect would you expect when flying from a high pressure
area towards a low pressure area at FL 100?
A. Wind from the left.
B. Tailwind with no drift.
C. Headwind with no drift.
D. Wind from the right.
137) Which constant pressure altitude chart is standard for a 30065 FT pressure level (FL 300)?
A. 200 hPa
B. 700 hPa
C. 500 hPa
D. 300 hPa
138) Which constant pressure altitude chart is standard for a 9882 FT pressure level (FL 100) ?
A. 700 hPa
B. 850 hPa
C. 500 hPa
D. 300 hPa
22

139) An aircraft is descending to land under IFR. If the local QNH is 1009 hPa, what will happen to the
altitude reading when the altimeter is reset at the transition level ?
A. It will remain the same
B. It will not be affected
C. It will decrease
D. It will increase
140) What pressure is defined as QFE?
A. The pressure reduced to sea level using actual temperatures
B. The pressure reduced to sea level using ISA temperatures
C. The pressure at field elevation
D. The pressure of the altimeter
141) You must make an emergency landing at sea. The QNH of a field on a nearby island with an
elevation of 4000 FT is 1025 hPa and the temperature is -20°C. What is your pressure altimeter reading
when landing if 1025 hPa is set in the subscale?
A. 0 FT
B. More than 0 FT, but less than 4000 FT
C. 4000 FT
D. Less than 0 FT
142) A 200 hPa pressure altitude level can vary in height. In temperate regions which of the following
average heights is applicable ?
A. FL 100.
B. FL 50.
C. FL 390.
D. FL 300.
143) After landing at an aerodrome (QNH 993 hPa) it is noticed that the altimeter is still set to 1013,2
hPa and that it reads 1200 feet. What is the elevation of the aerodrome above mean sea level ?
A. 1200 feet.
B. 1740 feet.
C. 2280 feet.
D. 660 feet.
144) The wind speed in a system with curved isobars compared to a system with straight isobars is
(other conditions being the same)
A. higher if curvature is cyclonic
B. higher if curvature is anticyclonic
C. always higher
D. always lower
145) If the QNH at Locarno (200 metres above sea level) is 1015 hPa, what is the approximate QFE?
(Assume 1hPa = 8m)
A. 1005 hPa
B. 990 hPa
C. 995 hPa
D. 1000 hPa
23

146) A 300 hPa pressure level can vary in height. In temperate regions which of the following average
heights is applicable ?
A. FL 100
B. FL 50
C. FL 300
D. FL 390
147) If you are planning a flight at FL 290, which of these upper wind and temperature charts would be
nearest your flight level ?
A. 850 hPa
B. 300 hPa
C. 500 hPa
D. 700 hPa
148) With a uniform pressure pattern and no thunderstorms around, what will the indication of the
aneroid altimeter of an aircraft parked on the ground do over a period of about ten minutes?
A. Apparently nothing, because any changes would be small.
B. Increase rapidly.
C. Show strong fluctuations.
D. Decrease rapidly.
149) During a flight over the sea at FL 135, the true altitude is 13500 feet; local QNH is 1019 hPa. What
information, if any, can be gained about the air mass in which the aircraft is flying?
A. Its average temperature is the same as ISA
B. It is warmer than ISA
C. There is insufficient information to make any assumption
D. It is colder than ISA
150) Which of the following is a common result of subsidence ?
A. Clear air turbulence at higher altitudes .
B. An inversion over a large area with haze, mist.
C. CB-clouds and thunderstorms over a large area.
D. Wide spread NS and AS clouds and intense precipitation.
151) An isohypse of the 500 hPa pressure surface is labelled with the number 552. This means that for
all points on the isohypse the
A. pressure is 552 hPa
B. topography is 552 meters above MSL
C. pressure altimeter will overread by 552 FT
D. topography is 552 decametres above MSL
152) What positions are connected by isobars on the surface weather chart?
A. Positions with the same relative pressure heights
B. Positions with the same air pressure at a given level
C. Positions with the same temperature at a given level
D. Positions with the same wind velocity at a given level
24

153) An altimeter adjusted to 1013 hPa indicates an altitude of 3600 FT. Should this altimeter be
adjusted to the local QNH value of 991 hPa, the altitude indicated would be
A. 4278 FT.
B. 4194 FT.
C. 3006 FT.
D. 2922 FT.
154) You plan a flight over a mountain range at a true altitude of 15000 FT/AMSL. The air is on an
average 15°C colder than ISA, the pressure at sea level is 1003 hPa. What indication must the altimeter
(setting 1013.2 hPa) read?
A. 15690 FT.
B. 14370 FT.
C. 13830 FT.
D. 16230 FT.
155) The QFF at an airfield in California located 69 metres below sea level is 1030 hPa. The air
temperature is 10°C lower than a standard atmosphere. What is the QNH?
A. 1030 hPa
B. It is not possible to give a definitive answer
C. More than 1030 hPa
D. Less than 1030 hPa
156) In order to reduce QFE to QNH, which of the following item(s) must be known ?
A. Temperature at the airfield
B. Elevation of the airfield and the temperature at MSL
C. Elevation of the airfield and the temperature at the airfield
D. Elevation of the airfield
157) You are flying at FL 160. Outside air temperature is 27°C, and the pressure at sea level is 1003
hPa. What is the true altitude?
A. 15630 feet
B. 16370 feet
C. 16910 feet
D. 15090 feet
158) What positions are connected by isobars on the surface weather chart?
A. Positions with the same relative pressure heights
B. Positions with the same air pressure at a given level
C. Positions with the same temperature at a given level
D. Positions with the same wind velocity at a given level
159) An altimeter adjusted to 1013 hPa indicates an altitude of 3600 FT. Should this altimeter be
adjusted to the local QNH value of 991 hPa, the altitude indicated would be
A. 4278 FT.
B. 4194 FT.
C. 3006 FT.
D. 2922 FT.
25

160) In the lower layers of the atmosphere due to friction the wind changes direction towards the low
pressure area because :
A. the pressure gradient increases
B. turbulence is formed and pressure increases
C. turbulence is formed and pressure decreases
D. wind speed decreases and therefore Coriolis force decreases
161) You plan a flight over a mountain range at a true altitude of 15000 FT/AMSL. The air is on an
average 15°C colder than ISA, the pressure at sea level is 1003 hPa. What indication must the altimeter
(setting 1013.2 hPa) read?
A. 15690 FT.
B. 14370 FT.
C. 13830 FT.
D. 16230 FT.

162. Winds in a low pressure


a. Converge
b. Diverge
c. Go straight

163. Low pressure is associated with


A. Good Weather
B. Bad Weather
C. None

164. In a high pressure area winds are


A. Normal
B. Strong
C. Weak

165. Flying from Low to High an altimeter would read


A. Over
B. Under
C. constant

166. Isallobars are lines of equal


A. Pressure
B. Temperature Tendency
C. Pressure Tendency
26

167. What kind of a barometer is an altimeter?


A. Aneroid
B. Mercury
C. Alcohol

168. A region between two Lows and Two Highs is


A. Depression
B. Secondary Low
C. Col

169. Bad weather and better visibility is associate with


A. High
B. Low
C. Col

170. The relationship between height and pressure is made use in construction of
A. Altimeter
B. ASI
C. V S I

171. Altimeter always measure the ht of aircraft


A. Above MSL
B. Above datum level of 1013.2 hPa
C. Above datum level at which its sub-scale is set

172. Two aircraft flying at the same indicated altitude with their altimeter set to 1013.2 hPa. One is
flying over cold air mass and other over warm air mass. Which of the two has greater altitude?
A. Ac flying over warm air mass
B. Ac flying over cold air mass

173. The rate of fall of pressure with height in a warm air mass compared to cold air mass will be
A. Same
B. More
C. Less

174. An increase of 1000 feet in elevation near the earth is associated with decrease of pressure of
A. 100 hPa
B. 1000 hPa
27

C. 3 hPa
D. 33 hPa

175. Lines drawn through places of equal pressure are known as


A. Isobars
B. Isotherms
C. Isogonal
D. Isoclinal

176. Isoclinal
A. Trough has frontal characteristics
B. After crossing the axis of trough winds back
C. After crossing the axis of trough winds veer

177. Diurnal pressure changes are most pronounced in


A. Polar region
B. Middle latitudes
C. Tropics

178. Flying from Delhi to Calcutta at constant indicated altitude but, experiencing a drift to Starboard.
The actual altitude will be (Vis-a-vis) indicated altitude
A. Lower
B. Same
C. Higher

179. In the Southern Hemisphere, around a Low Pressure Area wind blows
A. In clockwise direction
B. In anticlockwise direction
C. Across isobars towards the centre

180. If altimeter reads aerodrome elevation when a/c is on ground, its sub-scale must have been set
A. QNH
B. QNE
C. QFF
D. QFE

181. Instrument for recording pressure is called


A. Anemograph
28

B. Barometer
C. Hygrograph

182. Poor visibility is associated with


A. High
B. Low
C. Col

183. On either side of pressures rise


A. Trough
B. Ridge
C. Low

184. Fall of pressure with height is more rapid in


A. Cold areas
B. Warm areas
C. Humid areas

185. 300 hPa in ISA corresponds to the level


A. 20,000ft
B. 30,000 ft
C. 35,000 ft

186. 18,000 ft height in ISA corresponds to level


A. 700 hPa
B. 200 hPa
C. 500 hPa

187. 200 hPa in ISA corresponds to the level


A. 20,000ft
B. 30,000 ft
C. 40,000 ft

188. 24,000 ft height in ISA corresponds to level


A. 400 hPa
B. 500 hPa
C. 300 hPa
29

189. 700 hPa in ISA corresponds to the level


A. 20,000ft
B. 10,000 ft
C. 18,000 ft

190. 40,000 ft height in ISA corresponds to level


A. 400 hPa
B. 500 hPa
C. 200 hPa

191. 850 hPa in ISA corresponds to the level


A. 7,000ft
B. 5,000 ft
C. 10,000 ft

Temperature

192) The temperature at FL 110 is -5°C. What will the temperature be at FL 50 if the ICAO standard
lapse rate is applied ?
A. +3°C
B. 0°C
C. -3°C
D. +7°C
193) The temperature at FL 80 is +6°C. What will the temperature be at FL 130 if the ICAO standard
lapse rate is applied?
A. +2°C
B. -4°C
C. -6°C
D. 0°C
194) (For this question use annex 050-2558A) What OAT would you expect at FL 200 over Geneva ?
A. -28°C
B. -24°C
C. 20°C
D. -16°C
195) The 0° isotherm is forecast to be at FL 50. At what FL would you expect a temperature of -6° C?
A. FL 80
B. FL 20
C. FL 100
30

D. FL 110
196) Dew point is defined as
A. The temperature below which the change of state in a given volume of air will result in the
absorption of latent heat
B. the temperature to which moist air must be cooled to become saturated at a given pressure
C. the lowest temperature at which evaporation will occur for a given pressure
D. the lowest temperature to which air must be cooled in order to reduce the relative humidity
197) How, if at all, is the relative humidity of an unsaturated airmass influenced by temperature
changes?
A. It increases with increasing temperature.
B. It is only influenced by the amount of water vapour.
C. It decreases with increasing temperature.
D. It is not influenced by temperature changes.
198) Advection is :
A. the same as convection
B. horizontal motion of air
C. vertical motion of air
D. the same as subsidence
199) The process by which water vapour is transformed directly into ice is known as
A. sublimation
B. supercooling
C. supersaturation
D. radiation cooling
200) During the late afternoon an air temperature of +12°C and a dew point of +5°C were measured.
What temperature change must occur during the night in order to induce saturation?
A. It must decrease to +7°C.
B. It must decrease to +5°C.
C. It must decrease by 5°C.
D. It must decrease to +6°C.
201) What relationship exists between the wind at 3000 feet and the surface wind?
A. They are practically the same, except when eddies exist, caused by obstacles
B. The surface wind is veered compared to the wind at 3000 feet and is usually weaker.
C. The wind at 3000 feet is parallel to the isohypses and the surface wind direction is across the
isobars toward the low pressure and the surface wind is weaker.
D. They have the same direction, but the surface wind is weaker, caused by friction
202) The morning following a clear, calm night when the temperature has dropped to the dewpoint, is
likely to produce
A. a cold front
B. advection fog
C. good clear weather
D. radiation fog
31

203) The main factor which contributes to the formation of very low clouds ahead of a warm front is
the
A. saturation of the cold air by rain falling into it and evaporating
B. saturation of the warm air by rain falling into it and evaporating
C. reduction of outgoing radiation due to clouds
D. warm air moving over a cold surface
204) Several physical processes contribute to atmospheric warming. Which of the following
contribute the most?
A. Absorption and vaporization.
B. Absorption and evaporation.
C. Convection and condensation.
D. Solar radiation and conduction.
205) When water evaporates into unsaturated air
A. heat is absorbed
B. heat is released
C. relative humidity is not changed
D. relative humidity is decreased
206) In the lower part of the stratosphere the temperature
A. increases with altitude
B. increases at first and decreases afterward
C. is almost constant
D. decreases with altitude
207) A wide body takes off on a clear night in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia. Shortly after take off the aircraft's
rate of climb drops to zero. This can be due to
A. very pronounced downdraft
B. low relative humidity
C. a very strong temperature inversion
D. sand/dust in the engines
208) What does dew point mean?
A. The freezing level (danger of icing).
B. The temperature at which the relative humidity and saturation vapour pressure are the same.
C. The temperature to which a mass of air must be cooled in order to reach saturation.
D. The temperature at which ice melts.
209) When the temperature and dew point are less than one degree apart the weather conditions are
most likely to be
A. clear and cool
B. high scattered clouds
C. unlimited visibility
D. fog or low cloud
210) During an adiabatic process heat is
A. lost
B. added but the result is an overall loss
32

C. neither added nor lost


D. added
211) The difference between temperature and dew-point is greater in
A. moist air
B. air with high temperature
C. air with low temperature
D. dry air
212) The most effective way to dissipate cloud is by
A. subsidence
B. convection
C. a decrease in temperature
D. a decrease in pressure
213) Which of the following changes of state is known as sublimation?
A. Solid direct to liquid
B. Liquid direct to solid
C. Liquid direct to vapour
D. Solid direct to vapour
214) The maximum amount of water vapour that the air can contain depends on the
A. air temperature
B. relative humidity
C. stability of the air
D. dew point
215) At a weather station, at 0600 UTC, the air temperature and dew point are respectively: T = -
0,5°C,Td = -1,5°C. In the METAR message transmitted by this station, the "temperature group" will
be:
A. M00/M01
B. M01/M02
C. 00/M01
D. M01/M01
216) The dew point temperature
A. can not be equal to the air temperature
B. can be equal to the air temperature
C. is always lower than the air temperature
D. is always higher than the air temperature
217) In which of the following changes of state is latent heat released ?
A. Gas to liquid
B. Solid to liquid
C. Solid to gas
D. Liquid to gas
33

218) If you are flying at FL 300 in an air mass that is 15°C warmer than a standard atmosphere, what is
the outside temperature likely to be?
A. -15°C
B. -30°C
C. -45°C
D. -60°C

219. Diurnal variation of temperature is greatest when wind is


A. calm
B. light
C. strong

220. Diurnal variation of temperature is maximum over


A. forest
B. ocean
C. land

221. On a clear day the amount of radiation received by earth surface is


A. 3/4 th
B. 30%
C. 5/6 th

222. ALBEDO is
A. Radiation received by earth
B. Amount of heat
C. Reflecting power of earth

223. During Day the ambient temperature is ... than ground


A. Lower
B. Higher
C. Same

224. Diurnal variation of temperature over ocean is ...


A. More than land
B. Above 3°C
C. Less than 1°C
34

225. At a coast diurnal variation of temp, depends on ..


A. Wind direction
B. Wind speed
C. Radiation

226. Snow surface reflects about % of solar radiation.


A. 75%
B. 80%
C. 90%

227. Amount of Solar radiation received per unit area is ...


A. Insolation
B. Convection
C. Radiation

228. Solar radiation received by the earth is called..


A. Long Wave
B. Albedo
C. Shortwave

229. Rise in temperature of a surface is proportional to its specific heat


A. Directly
B. Indirectly

230.Specific heat of land is than that of water


A. Lower
B. Same
C. Higher

231. Minimum temperature is reached at ...


A. sunrise
B. midnight
C. 1/2 - 1 hour after dawn

232. An air parcel is lifted till it gets saturated. The temperature attained at this stage is called
A. Potential temperature
B. Dew Point
35

C. Wet bulb

233. Cloudy nights are


A. cold
B. normal
C. warm

234. Water vapour is transparent to terrestrial radiation


A. completely
B. partially
C. indifferent

235. Higher the temperature ... would be the wavelength of emitted radiation
A. longer
B. shorter

236. Air is a bad conductor of heat. A parcel of air can therefore be regarded as insulated from the
environment
A. False
B. True

237. Warmer the earth ... will be the Nocturnal radiation


A. larger
B. smaller

238. Heat is the of the KE of all molecules and atoms of a substance


A. sum total
B. average

239. The solar radiation consists of about 46 %


A. UV
B. IR
C. Visible
36

240. The total amount of energy radiated by a black body is proportional to


A. T2
B. T3
C. T4

241. Intense radiation are emitted by


A. Hot bodies
B. Cold bodies
C. Stars

242. The wavelength of most intense radiation is inversely proportional to the....


A. Absolute temperature
B. Humidity
C. Albedo

243. Hot bodies (like sun) radiate


A. Short Waves
B. Long Waves
C. Both

244. The flow of heat from earth surface is 77% by


A. Sensible Heat
B. Latent Heat

245. -40° C - -40° F


A. True
B. False

246. Surface Temp, is recorded at a height of above ground


A. 1.5 m
B. 1.25m
C. 2 m

247. The door of Stevenson's screen should open


A. opposite to sun
37

B. into sun
C. any direction

248. The liquid used in Minimum Thermometer is


A. mercury
B. alcohol
C. sprit

. Density

249) Under what condition does pressure altitude have the same value as density altitude ?
A. At sea level when the temperature is 0°C.
B. When the altimeter has no position error.
C. When the altimeter setting is 1013,2 hPa.
D. At standard temperature.

250. Density is at poles than equator

A. Higher

B. Lower

C. Same

251. Above 8 km density is at poles than at equator

A. Higher

B. Lower

C. Same

252. The altitude in ISA at which air density is the same as the observed density is called

A. Density Altitude

B. ISA Density

C. Real Density

253. Density is usually expressed as

A. Kg/sq m
38

B. g/cu m

C. N/sq m

254. Higher density altitude means density

A. Higher

B. Lower

C. Same

255. For given pressure and temperature moist air has density

A. Higher

B. Lower

C. Same

256. Air is less denser in

A. High Altitudes

B. Warm Air

C. High humidity

D. All these

257. Density altitude may be defined as:

A. The altitude in a standard atmosphere at which the prevailing pressure occurs.

B. The altitude in a standard atmosphere at which the prevailing density occurs.

C. Surface of constant atmospheric pressure related to standard atmosphere of 1013.2 hPa


39

Humidity
258) Relative humidity at a given temperature is the relation between
A. water vapour weight and humid air volume
B. dew point and air temperature
C. actual water vapour content and saturated water vapour content
D. water vapour weight and dry air weight
259) When a given mass of air descends, what effect will it have on relative humidity?
A. It increases.
B. It remains constant.
C. It increases up to 100%, then remains stable.
D. It decreases.
260) Relative humidity depends on
A. moisture content of the air only
B. temperature of the air only
C. moisture content and temperature of the air
D. moisture content and pressure of the air
261) A parcel of moist but not saturated air rises due to adiabatic effects. Which of the following
changes?
A. Mixing ratio
B. Specific humidity
C. Relative humidity
D. Absolute humidity
262) Relative humidity
A. does not change when water vapour is added provided the temperature of the air remains
constant.
B. changes when water vapour is added, even though the temperature remains constant.
C. is not affected when air is ascending or descending.
D. is not affected by temperature changes of the air.
263) How does relative humidity and the dewpoint in an unsaturated air mass change with varying
temperature?
A. When temperature increases, the relative humidity decreases, and the dewpoint remains
constant.
B. When temperature increases, the relative humidity increases, and the dewpoint decreases.
C. When temperature decreases, the relative humidity decreases, and the dewpoint increases.
D. When temperature decreases, the relative humidity and the dewpoint remain constant.
264) The relative humidity of a sample air mass is 50%. How is the relative humidity of this air mass
influenced by changes of the amount of water vapour in it?
A. It decreases with increasing water vapour.
B. It is only influenced by temperature.
C. It increases with increasing water vapour.
40

D. It is not influenced by changing water vapour.


265) In which layer is most of the atmospheric humidity concentrated ?
A. Stratosphere.
B. Stratopause.
C. Troposphere.
D. Tropopause.
266) Relative humidity
A. increases if the air is cooled whilst maintaining the vapour pressure constant
B. is higher in warm air than in cool air
C. is higher in cool air than in warm air
D. decreases if the air is cooled whilst maintaining the vapour pressure constant

267. The ratio in % between the amount of water vapour present in the air to the amount of water
vapour that it can hold at the same temperature is
A. Humidity
B. Relative humidity
C. Dew point

268. The temperature to which air be cooled at constant pressure to become saturated, is called
A. Wet bulb temperature
B. Dry bulb temperature
C. Dew point
D. Humidity

269. Free air temperature, Wet bulb temperature and Dew point temperature are equal when
A. Air temperature is 0°C
B. Relative humidity is 100%
C. Air temperature is not below 0°C

270. On a rainy day compared to sunny day the length of runway required is
A. More
B. Less
C. Same

271. The spread between Free air temperature and Dew point temperature is .... when air is saturated
A. Large
B. Least
C. Same
41

272. The saturation vapour pressure over water is than the ice
A. More
B. Less
C. Same

273. As the temperature of the air increases, the amount of water vapour required to saturate it
A. decreases
B. increases
C. remains same

274. The actual amount of water vapour contained in a given volume of air at a given temperature is
termed as ...
A. Relative Humidity
B. Specific Humidity
C. Absolute Humidity

275. Humidity Mixing Ratio ……. when air is lifted adiabatically


A. decreases
B. remains constant
C. increases

276. It is the lowest temperature which air would attain by evaporating water into it to saturate it.
A. Wet bulb temp
B. Dry bulb temp
C. Dew point
42

Winds
277) In the central part of the Atlantic Ocean between 10°N and 20°N the prevailing winds are
A. NE monsoon in winter and SW monsoon in summer
B. SE trade winds
C. SW winds throughout the whole year
D. NE trade winds
278) The Foehn wind is a
A. cold fall wind
B. warm anabatic wind
C. cold anabatic wind
D. warm fall wind
279) What is the approximate speed of a 40-knot wind, expressed in m/sec?
A. 20 m/sec
B. 15 m/sec
C. 25 m/sec
D. 30 m/sec

280) What causes surface winds to flow across the isobars at an angle rather than parallel to the
isobars ?
A. Greater density of the air at the surface
B. Greater atmospheric pressure at the surface
C. Surface friction
D. Coriolis force
281) Which of the following circumstances most favour the development of radiation fog?
A. Moist air over land during clear night with little wind
B. Warm moist air at the windward side of a mountain
C. Maritime tropical air flowing over cold sea
D. Advection of very cold air over much warmer sea
282) For a similar pressure gradient, the geostrophic wind speed will be
A. greater at 30°N than at 60°N
B. greater at 60°N than at 30°N
C. the same at all latitudes north or south of 15°
D. equivalent to gradient wind ± thermal component
283) The Bora is a
A. cold catabiotic wind always associated with clouds and heavy showers
B. cold catabiotic wind with the possibility of violent gusts
C. squally warm catabatic wind which occurs mainly in summer
D. cold catabatic wind with gusts associated with a maritime air mass
43

284) What is the name of the northerly, cold and strong wind, that sometimes blows over a certain
part of Europe?
A. Typhoon.
B. Mistral.
C. Foehn.
D. Bora.
285) Which weather phenomena are typical for the northern side of the Alps with stormy winds from
the south (Foehn)?
A. Continuous precipitation, severe turbulence.
B. Decrease in temperature, moderate to severe icing.
C. Icing, huge mass of clouds.
D. Good visibility, turbulence.
286) What prevents air from flowing directly from high-pressure areas to low-pressure areas ?
A. Surface friction
B. Katabatic force
C. The pressure gradient force
D. Coriolis force
287) Low level wind shear is likely to be greatest
A. at the top of a marked surface-based inversion.
B. at the condensation level when there is no night radiation.
C. at the condensation level when there is strong surface friction.
D. at the top of the friction layer.
288) The vertical extent of the friction layer depends primarily on
A. roughness of surface, temperature, local time
B. temperature, local time, environmental lapse rate
C. stability, wind speed, roughness of surface
D. wind speed, roughness of surface, temperature
289) Which of the following is true of a land breeze?
A. It blows only at noon
B. It blows from land to water
C. It blows from water to land
D. It blows by day
290) You intend to carry out a VFR flight over the Alps, on a hot summer day, when the weather is
unstable. What is the best time of day to conduct this flight?
A. Mid-day.
B. Afternoon.
C. Early evening.
D. Morning.
291) A strong, dry and warm katabatic wind, produced by prior enforced ascent of air over hills or
mountains is known as a
A. Bora
B. Foehn
44

C. Harmattan
D. Mistral
292) Which one of the following local winds is a Foehn wind?
A. Scirocco
B. Harmattan
C. Bora
D. Chinook
293) The difference between geostrophic wind and gradient wind is caused by
A. curvature of isobars
B. friction
C. horizontal temperature gradients
D. slope of pressure surfaces
294) The sea breeze is a wind from the sea
A. occurring only in mid-latitudes and in daytime
B. occurring only in the lower layers of the atmosphere in daytime
C. that reaches up to the tropopause in daytime
D. blowing at night in mid-latitudes
295) Which forces are balanced with geostrophic winds?
A. Friction force, pressure gradient force, Coriolis force.
B. Pressure gradient force, Coriolis force, centrifugal force.
C. Pressure gradient force, centrifugal force, friction force.
D. Pressure gradient force, Coriolis force.
296) Which of the following is true concerning an aircraft that is flying at FL180 in the northern
hemisphere, where wind is geostrophic and the true altitude remains constant ?
A. There is a cross wind from the left
B. There is a cross wind from the right
C. Without knowing temperature at FL 180 this question can not be answered
D. There is no cross wind
297) A dry, sand- and dust-laden North Easterly wind that blows in winter over large parts of North
West Africa is known as a
A. Pampero
B. Kham sin
C. Harmattan
D. Scirocco
298) During periods of prolonged clear skies associated with anti-cyclonic conditions, the
A. surface wind speed tends to be highest at night
B. angle between isobars and surface wind direction tends to be greatest in the early afternoon
C. wind tends to back from early morning until early afternoon
D. surface wind speed tends to be highest during the early afternoon
299) What units are used to report vertical wind shear?
A. kt.
45

B. m/100 FT.
C. m/sec.
D. kt/100 FT.
300) What is the name of the hot, local wind, that blows downwards from mountain chains? In the
Alps, for instance, it may exist both as a southerly or northerly wind depending on the weather
situation.
A. Mistral.
B. Bora.
C. Scirocco.
D. Foehn.
301) When isobars, for an area in the mid-latitudes on a weather map, are close together, the wind is
most likely to be
A. changing direction rapidly
B. light
C. strong
D. blowing perpendicular to the isobars
302) Vertical wind shear is
A. vertical variation in the horizontal wind
B. vertical variation in the vertical wind
C. horizontal variation in the horizontal wind
D. horizontal variation in the vertical wind
303) (For this question use annex 050-4319A) Of the four radio soundings, select the one that
indicates low stratus:
A. 4
B. 3
C. 1
D. 2
304) Friction between the air and the ground results in the northern hemisphere in:
A. backing of the wind and decrease of wind speed at the surface.
B. veering of the wind and decrease of wind speed at the surface.
C. backing of the wind and increase of wind speed at the surface.
D. veering of the wind and increase of wind speed at the surface.
305) A zone of strong convection currents is encountered during a flight. In spite of moderate gust
you decide to continue the flight. What are your precautionary measures?
A. Increase the speed / try to climb above the zone of convective currents if aircraft performance
parameters allow.
B. Decrease the speed / try to descend below the zone of convective currents.
C. Increase the speed / try to descend below the zone of convective currents.
D. Decrease the speed / try to climb above the zone of convective currents if aircraft
performance parameters allow.
306) The geostrophic wind is less than the gradient wind around an anticyclone because the
A. centrifugal force is added to the pressure gradient
46

B. centrifugal force opposes the pressure gradient


C. effect of Coriolis is added to friction
D. Coriolis effect opposes the centrifugal force
307) Geostrophic wind is the wind when isobars are
A. curved lines and no friction is involved
B. straight lines and friction is involved.
C. curved lines and friction is involved.
D. straight lines and no friction is involved.
308) In the northern hemisphere with an anticyclonic pressure system the geostrophic wind at 2000
FT over the sea is 060/15. At the same position the surface wind is most likely to be
A. 045/12
B. 060/12
C. 060/18
D. 075/12
309) An easterly wave is a
A. wave in a trade wind belt, moving from east to west, with severe convective activity in rear of
its trough
B. wave-like disturbance in the monsoon regime of India, moving from east to west, with severe
convective activity ahead of its trough
C. small scale wave disturbance in the tropics, moving from east to west, with severe convective
activity ahead of its trough
D. disturbance in the higher levels associated with the equatorial easterly jet, moving from east
to west, with severe convective activity in rear of its trough
310) Which of the following statements concerning trade winds is correct?
A. They occur only in the lower part of the troposphere and are more pronounced over the
continents
B. They occur only in the lower part of the troposphere and more pronounced over the oceans
C. They reach up to the tropopause and are more pronounced over the continents
D. They reach up to the tropopause and are more pronounced over the oceans
311) The wind indicator for a weather observation receives the measured value from an anemometer.
Where is this instrument placed?
A. On a mast 8-10 m above the ground.
B. 1 m above the runway.
C. Close to the station about 2 m above the ground.
D. On the roof of the weather station.
312) In the northern hemisphere the wind at the surface blows
A. from a low pressure area to a high pressure area
B. clockwise around, and away from the centre of, a low pressure area
C. counter-clockwise around, and away from the centre of, a high pressure area.
D. counter-clockwise around, and toward the centre of, a low pressure area
47

313) Under anticyclone conditions in the northern hemisphere, with curved isobars the speed of the
gradient wind is
A. greater than the geostrophic wind
B. less than the geostrophic wind
C. the same as the thermal component
D. proportional only to the Coriolis force
314) Whilst flying at FL 180 on the northern hemisphere an aircraft experiences right drift. What
effect, if any, will this have on the aircraft's true altitude ?
A. Without knowing the pressure change this question cannot be answered.
B. It decreases
C. It increases.
D. It remains constant.
315) In the northern hemisphere a pilot flying at 1000 FT/AGL directly towards the centre of a low
pressure area, will find the wind blowing from
A. left and behind
B. right and behind
C. about 45 degrees to the right of directly ahead
D. directly ahead
316) What is the approximate speed of a 90 km/h wind, expressed in knots?
A. 55 kt
B. 60 kt
C. 70 kt
D. 50 kt
317) In a land- and sea-breeze circulation the land-breeze blows :
A. during the day and is weaker than the sea-breeze.
B. during the night and is stronger than the sea-breeze.
C. during the night and is weaker than the sea-breeze.
D. during the day and is stronger than the sea-breeze.
318) In a mountain-valley wind circulation, the mountain wind blows
A. at night down from the mountains
B. at night up from the valley
C. during the day down from the mountains
D. during the day up from the valley
319) The most frequent wind direction in a valley caused by thermal effects is toward the :
A. mountain during daylight hours.
B. mountain at night.
C. valley during daylight hours.
D. valley during daylight as much as at night.
320) A mountain breeze (katabatic wind) blows
A. down the slope during the day.
B. up the slope during the night.
C. down the slope during the night.
48

D. up the slope during the day.


321) Wind is caused by
A. the rotation of the earth
B. friction between the air and the ground
C. the movements of fronts
D. horizontal pressure differences
322) How may the correct wind speed be found, for a level, which is between two upper air chart levels?
(e.g. wind at FL 250, when the 500 hPa and the 300 hPa chart are available).
A. By reading wind direction and speed from the 300 hPa chart.
B. By interpolation of the wind information available from the two charts, while also considering
the maximum wind information found on the Significant Weather Chart.
C. By simple interpolation of wind information available from the two charts.
D. By reading wind direction and speed from the next higher chart.
323) You are flying at 2 500 FT/AGL, with a southerly wind, and intend to land at an airport, at sea
level directly below. From approximately which direction would you expect the surface wind (mid-
latitude, northern hemisphere)?
A. Southwest.
B. South.
C. South-southeast.
D. South-southwest.
324) During a descent from 2000 FT above the surface to the surface (no frontal passage) the wind
normally
A. backs and decreases
B. veers and increases
C. backs and increases
D. veers and decreases
325) What winds are mainly associated with the winter monsoon in the monsoon regions of the Indian
subcontinent ?
A. North-easterly winds bringing dry and hazy air.
B. South-westerly winds carrying warm and humid air.
C. North-westerly winds bringing dry and hazy air.
D. South-easterly winds carrying warm and humid air.
326) The wind tends to follow the contour lines (isotypes) above the friction layer because
A. contour lines are lines that connect points with the same windspeed in the upper air
B. the Coriolis force acts perpendicular on a line that connects high and low pressure system
C. the friction of the air with the earth's surface gives the airflow a diversion perpendicular to the
gradient force.
D. the Coriolis force tends to balance with the horizontal pressure gradient force
327) After passing at right angles through a very active cold front in the direction of the cold air, what
will you encounter, in the northern hemisphere immediately after a marked change in temperature?
A. A veering in the wind direction.
B. A backing in the wind direction.
49

C. An increase in tailwind.
D. A decrease in headwind.
328) From which direction do the trade winds blow, in the southern hemisphere?
A. N
B. SE
C. NE
D. SW
329) What is the effect of a strong low level inversion ?
A. It results in good visual conditions.
B. It promotes vertical winds hear.
C. It promotes extensive vertical movement of air.
D. It prevents vertical winds hear.
330) What is the strong relatively cold katabatic wind, blowing down the northern Adriatic coast, mainly
during the winter and spring called?
A. Bora.
B. Ghibli.
C. Mistral.
D. Scirocco.
331) Generally northern hemisphere winds at 5000 FT/AGL are south-westerly while most of the
surface winds are southerly. What is the primary reason of difference between these two wind
directions?
A. A strong pressure gradient at higher altitudes.
B. Stronger Coriolis force at the surface.
C. The influence of warm air at the lower altitude.
D. Friction between the wind and the surface.
332) The geostrophic wind speed is directly proportional to the
A. curvature of isobars
B. sine of latitude
C. density of the air
D. horizontal pressure gradient
333) Geostrophic wind
A. is perpendicular to the horizontal pressure gradient force
B. is directly proportional to the density of the air
C. always increases with increasing height
D. veers with height if cold air is advected in the northern hemisphere
334) An aircraft is flying at FL 180 on the northern hemisphere with a crosswind from the left. Which
of the following is correct concerning its true altitude ?
A. It increases
B. It remains constant
C. Without knowing temperatures at FL 180 this question can not be answered.
D. It decreases
50

335) In the lower layers of the atmosphere due to friction the wind changes direction towards the low
pressure area because :
A. the pressure gradient increases
B. turbulence is formed and pressure increases
C. turbulence is formed and pressure decreases
D. wind speed decreases and therefore Coriolis force decreases
336) The geostrophic wind is greater than the gradient wind around a low pressure system because the
A. Coriolis force opposes to the centrifugal force
B. centrifugal force opposes the pressure gradient
C. centrifugal force is added to the pressure gradient
D. Coriolis force is added to the pressure gradient

337. In S hemisphere if an observer faces wind, low will be to his


A. Right
B. Left

338. In N hemisphere due to rotation of earth winds are deflected to


A. Left
B. Right

339. Local Winds follow Buys Ballots law


A. False
B. True

340. Coriolis force acts perpendicular towards of wind direction


A. Left
B. Right

341. Geostrophic wind is due to the balance between the forces


A. Coriolis and Friction
B. Pressure gradient and Cyclostrophic
C. Pressure gradient and Coriolis

342. Coriolis force is strongest at


A. Mid latitudes
B. Poles
C. Equator
51

343. Geostrophic rule breaks down at


A. Mid latitudes
B. Poles
C. Equator

344. Fohn winds are on the Leeward side of a mountain,


A. Dry &Warm
B. Cold & Humid

345. The wind sliding down a hill during night is called wind.
A. Fohn
B. Anabatic
C. Katabatic

346. With the onset of sea breeze there is a in temperature and in RH.
A. Fall/Rise
B. Rise/Fall
C. Fall/Fall

347. Sea breeze sets in by and dies off at


A. Night/Day
B. Day/Night
C. Both Day and Night

348. If an aircraft in N-hemisphere flies from H to L it will experience


A. Starboard drift
B. Port drift

349. In N-Hemisphere if you experience Port drift , altimeter will read


A. Under
B. Over

350. Lines of constant wind speed drawn on weather charts are called
A. Isobars
B. Isotachs
C. Isogons
52

351. Squall are distinguished from gusts by:


A. Shorter duration
B. Longer duration
C. Lower wind speed

352. The thermal wind is:


A. The wind that blows because of thermals
B. The warm wind that blows down the hül on the leeward side
C. The wind which must be added vectorilly to the lower level geostrophic wind to obtain the
upper level geostrophic wind

353. On a weather map where isobars are closely packed, the surface winds are likelyto be
A. Light and parallel to isobars
B. Strong and parallel to isobars
C. Strong and blowing acros theisobars

354. Anabatic wind occurs


A. At night
B. Any time of day and night
C. During day

355. Anabatic wind is stronger than katabatic


A. True
B. False

356. Katabatic wind is down slope cold wind due to nocturnal cooling
A. True
B. False

357. Katabatic wind occur due to sinking of air down the hill slope
A. True
B. False

358. Anabatic wind occur due to downward movement of air along valley
A. True
B. False
53

359. Sea breeze is stronger than land breeze


A. True
B. False

360. The wind blows clockwise around low in a N-hemisphere


A. True
B. False

361. The wind blows clockwise around low in S-hemisphere


A. True
B. False

362. The wind blows anticlockwise around low in N-hemisphere


A. True
B. False

363. The wind blows anticlockwise around low in S- hemisphere


A. True
B. False

364. The resultant wind that blows under the influence of pressure gradient force, geostrophic force
and cyclostrophic force is called
A. Gradient wind
B. Geostrophic wind

365. Due to friction, from day to night for an isobaric pattern (in N hemisphere) Surface wind backs
and lulls
A. True
B. False

366. The winds which spiral inward in a counter-clockwise direction in the NH are associated with
A. Turbulence
B. High pressure area
C. Low pressure area

367. Lower level wind 05010 kt, upper level wind 23005 kt, what is the thermal wind
A. 05005 kt
54

B. 23015 kt
C. 05015 kt

368. A change in wind direction from 310° to 020° is


A. Backing
B. Veering

369. A change from 270° to 250° is


A. Backing
B. Veering

370. Sudden change in wind speed from 10 kt to 30 kt and then to 15 kt is


A. Gust
B. Squall

371. Sudden change in wind speed from 10 kt to 30 kt for more than a minute or so is
A. Squall
B. Gust

372. A significant wind shear can be associated with TS or line squall


A. False
B. True

373. Cyclostrophic wind gives a good approximation of the 2000' wind in an intense tropical storm
A. True
B. False

374. Rotor clouds have extremely turbulent flying conditions


A. False
B. True

375. Friction causes winds to flow cross isobaric by over land and .... over sea
A. 30/15°
B. 20/30°
C. 40/30°
55

376. If temperature is higher to the S and lower to the N from surface up to higher levels , then
the wind will strengthen with height with no change in direction in N hemisphere
A. Ely
B. Wly
C. Sly
D. Nly

377. Gradient wind is of geostrophic wind in an anticyclone


A. Under estimate
B. Accurate
C. Over estimate

378. Gale is
A. persistent strong winds with mean speed 44 kt, associated with thunderstorm
B. marked increase in wind speed lasing few minutes associated with CB or dust storm
C. persistent strong winds exceeding 33 kt, associated with depression

379. In N hemisphere thermal wind is parallel to ...with low value to left


A. Isobars
B. Isotherms
C. Isallobars

Stability & Instability

380) Absolute instability exists whenever the environmental lapse rate


A. exceeds the saturated adiabatic lapse rate.
B. is less than the saturated adiabatic lapse rate.
C. is between the dry and saturated adiabatic lapse rate.
D. exceeds the dry adiabatic lapse rate.
381) What characteristic is associated with a temperature inversion?
A. Stability
B. Instability
C. Clear ice
D. Area of active storms

382) A sample of moist but unsaturated air may become saturated by


A. expanding it adiabatically
B. raising the temperature
56

C. lowering the pressure, keeping temperature constant


D. compressing it adiabatically
383) Which statement is true for a conditionally unstable layer?
A. The environmental lapse rate is less than 0.65°C/100m
B. The layer is unstable for unsaturated air
C. The wet adiabatic lapse rate is 0.65°C/100m
D. The environmental lapse rate is less than 1°C/100m
384) If in a 100 m thick layer the temperature at the bottom of the layer is 10°C and at the top of the
layer is 8°C then this layer is
A. conditionally unstable
B. neutral
C. absolutely unstable
D. absolutely stable
385) When in the upper part of a layer warm air is advected the
A. stability increases in the layer
B. stability decreases in the layer
C. wind will back with increasing height in the northern hemisphere
D. wind speed will always decrease with increasing height in the northern hemisphere
386) The dry adiabatic lapse rate
A. is greater during the night than during the day
B. has a variable value
C. has a constant fixed value
D. is greater in summer than in winter
387) From which of the following pieces of information can the stability of the atmosphere be derived?
A
A. Pressure at the surface
B. Environmental lapse rate
C. Surface temperature
D. Dry adiabatic lapse rate
388) In still air the temperature decreases at an average of 1.2°C per 100 m increase in altitude. This
temperature change is called:
A. dry adiabatic lapse rate
B. normal lapse rate
C. environmental lapse rate
D. saturated adiabatic lapse rate
389) The stability in a layer is increasing if
A. warm air is advected in the upper part and cold air in the lower part
B. warm air is advected in the lower part and cold air in the upper part
C. warm and moist air is advected in the lower part
D. cold and dry air is advected in the upper part
57

390) The environmental lapse rate in an actual atmosphere


A. has a fixed value of 2°C/1000 FT
B. varies with time
C. has a fixed value of 1°C/100m
D. has a fixed value of 0.65°C/100m
391) A moist but unsaturated parcel of air becomes saturated by
A. lifting the parcel to a higher level
B. lowering the parcel to a lower level
C. moving the parcel to an area with lower pressure and equal temperature
D. moving the parcel to an area with higher pressure and equal temperature
392) The value of the saturated adiabatic lapse rate is closest to that of the dry adiabatic lapse rate in
A. stratus
B. cumulus
C. cirrus
D. freezing fog
393) A layer is conditionally unstable if the air
A. becomes stable by lifting it.
B. is unstable for saturated air as well as for dry air.
C. is unstable for saturated air and stable for dry air.
D. is stable for saturated air and unstable for dry air.
394) You intend to overfly a mountain range. The recommended minimum flight altitude is, according
to the aviation chart, 15000 FT/AMSL. The air mass that you will fly through is on average 15°C
warmer than the standard atmosphere. The altimeter is set to QNH (1023 hPa). At what altimeter reading
will you effectively be at the recommended minimum flight altitude?
A. 14100 FT.
B. 13830 FT.
C. 14370 FT.
D. 15900 FT.

395. DALR = 9.8 °C, ELR = 6.8 °C ; atmosphere is


A. stable
B. unstable
C. indifferent

396. SALR = 5.5 °C, ELR= 4.5 °C ; atmosphere is


a. unstable
b. stable
c. indifferent

397. DALR > ELR > SALR


a. conditionally stable
58

b. latently stable
c. potentially stable

398. Dry air is unstable when


a. ELR-DALR
b. ELR>DALR
c. ELR<DALR

399. The saturated air is said to be unstable if


a. SALR=ELR
b. SALR<ELR
c. SALR > ELR

400. If ELR = SALR - DALR the atmosphere is


a. Stable
b. Instable
c. Indifferent

401. DALR means:


a. The rate at which temperature of unsaturated parcel of air falls with height
b. when made to ascend adiabatically
c. The rate at which temp falls with height
d. The rate at which ascending parcel of saturated air cools

402. The surface air temp, is 30° C. Assuming DALR prevailing what is the temperature at 2 km
a. 18° C
b. 10° C
c. 42° C

403. An Isothermal atmosphere is


a. Stable
b. Unstable
c. Neutral

404. If environmental lapse rate(ELR) is less than SALR, that part of the atmosphere is said to be:
a. Absolutely unstable
b. Conditionally stable
59

c. Absolutely stable

405. DALR is approximately


a. 5 ° C /km
b. 15 ° C /km
c. 10 ° C /km

406. SALR at mean sea level is about


a. 10 ° C/Km
b. 5 ° C/Km
c. 5 ° F/Km

407. SALR approaches DALR


a. at 0°C
b. at -15°F
c. at -40°C

408. Dry air having a temperature of 35°C on surface when forced to rise adiabatically by 1 km would
attain a temperature of
a. 29°C
b. 25°C
c. 45°C

409. Inversion in the atmosphere indicates


a. Stability
b. Instability
c. Neutrality

410. Inversion is Lapse Rate (LR)


a. Positive
b. Negative
c. Neutral

500. Environmental LR can be more than DALR


a. True
b. False
60

501. The process which to a large extent determines the vertical distribution of temperature in
atmosphere is
a. Adiabatic
b. Isothermal
c. Isentropic

502. Rise in temperature with height is


a. Inversion
b. Lapse
c. (c) Normal

503. Inversion is common in


a. Post Monsoon
b. Monsoon
c. Winters

Clouds / Fog

504) From what type of cloud does drizzle fall?


A. Altostratus
B. Cumulus
C. Cirrostratus.
D. Stratus.
505) The height of the lifting condensation level is determined by
A. wind and dew point at the surface
B. wet adiabatic lapse rate and dew point at the surface
C. temperature and dew point at the surface
D. temperature at surface and air pressure
506) Which of the following processes within a layer of air may lead to the building of CU and CB
clouds?
A. Frontal lifting within stable layers.
B. Convection.
C. Radiation.
D. Subsidence.
507) Altostratus clouds are classified as
A. high level clouds
B. convective clouds
61

C. medium level clouds


D. low level clouds
508) Which of the following cloud types is a medium level cloud ?
A. ST
B. SC
C. AS
D. CS
509) Which of the following clouds are classified as medium level clouds in temperate regions ?
A. AS, AC.
B. SC, NS
C. CI, CC.
D. CS, ST.
510) Which of the following cloud types is found at high levels?
A. CU
B. CI
C. SC
D. AS
511) Which of the following types of clouds are evidence of unstable air conditions?
A. SC, NS.
B. CI, SC.
C. CU, CB.
D. ST, CS.
512) Which of the following weather conditions favour the formation of radiation fog?
A. Light wind, extensive cloud, dry air.
B. Light wind, extensive cloud, moist air.
C. Strong wind, little or no cloud, moist air.
D. Light wind, little or no cloud, moist air.
513) What wind conditions, occurring just before dawn, favour the formation of fog at an airport
where the temperature is 15°C and the dew point is 14°C?
A. Westerly, 10 kt variable.
B. Easterly, 10 kt.
C. Calm.
D. Northerly, 10 kt.
514) With which of the following types of cloud is "+RA" precipitation most commonly associated?
A. SC
B. ST
C. NS
D. AC
515) Which of the following statements is true concerning advection fog?
A. It forms when unstable air is cooled adiabatically
B. It forms slowly and disappears rapidly
62

C. It can be formed suddenly by day or night


D. It forms at night or the early morning
516) At what time of day, or night, is radiation fog most likely to occur?
A. Shortly after midnight.
B. Shortly after sunrise.
C. At sunset.
D. Late evening.
517) The presence of altocumulus castellanos indicates
A. subsidence in a large part of the troposphere
B. instability in the middle troposphere
C. strong convection at low height
D. stability in the higher troposphere
518) Which of the following cloud is classified as low level cloud ?
A. CS
B. AS
C. CC
D. ST
519) Freezing fog exists if fog droplets
A. are supercooled
B. are frozen
C. are freezing very rapidly
D. freeze when temperature falls below zero
520) Which of the following clouds may extend into more than one layer?
A. Stratus.
B. Altocumulus.
C. Cirrus.
D. Nimbostratus.
521) Which of the following types of cloud can extend over the low, medium and high cloud levels ?
A. CB
B. AC
C. ST
D. CI
522) Clouds, classified as being low level are considered to have bases from
A. 500 to 1000 FT
B. 100 to 200 FT
C. the surface to 6500 FT
523) In which of these cloud types can icing be virtually ruled out?
A. NS
B. CU
C. CI
D. SC
63

524) During periods of prolonged clear skies associated with anti-cyclonic conditions, the
A. surface wind speed tends to be highest at night
B. angle between isobars and surface wind direction tends to be greatest in the early afternoon
C. wind tends to back from early morning until early afternoon
D. surface wind speed tends to be highest during the early afternoon
525) With what type of cloud is "DZ" precipitation most commonly associated?
A. CU
B. ST
C. CB
D. CC

526) Which of the following conditions is most likely to lead to the formation of advection fog ?
A. Dry cold air moving over a warm surface
B. Moist warm air moving over a cold surface
C. Moist cold air moving over a warm surface
D. Dry warm air moving over a cold surface
527) Under which of these conditions is radiation fog most likely to form?
A. Little or no cloud
B. Very dry air
C. Strong surface winds
D. Very low temperatures
528) A cumulonimbus cloud at moderate latitudes in summer contains
A. only ice crystals
B. a combination of ice crystals and water droplets
C. a combination of ice crystals, water droplets and supercooled water droplets
D. only water droplets
529) Fair weather cumulus often is an indication of
A. a high risk of thunderstorms
B. turbulence at and below the cloud level
C. poor visibility at surface
D. smooth flying conditions below the cloud level
530) What is the average vertical extent of radiation fog?
A. 2 000 FT.
B. 5 000 FT.
C. 10 000 FT.
D. 500 FT.
531) What is the meaning of the abbreviation "SCT" ?
A. 5 - 7 oktas
B. 1 - 4 oktas
C. 3 - 4 oktas
D. 1 - 2 oktas
64

532) With what type of clouds are showers most likely associated?
A. Cumulonimbus.
B. Stratocumulus.
C. Nimbostratus.
D. Stratus.
533) What are the characteristics of cumuliform clouds?
A. Small water droplets, instability, turbulence, extensive areas of rain and rime ice.
B. Large water droplets, instability, turbulence, showers and mainly clear ice.
C. Small water droplets, stability, no turbulence and extensive areas of rain.
D. Large water droplets, stability, no turbulence, showers and mainly rime ice.
534) The most hazardous type of cloud that may be encountered on a cross country flight is
A. cumulus
B. cirrus
C. cumulonimbus
D. stratocumulus
535) Advection fog can be formed when
A. warm moist air flows over a warmer surface
B. cold moist air flows over warmer water
C. warm moist air flows over a colder surface
D. cold moist air flows over a warmer surface
536) Which of the following conditions is most likely to lead to the formation of steam fog (arctic
smoke)?
A. Warm air moving over cold water
B. The sea is warmed by strong radiation from the sun
C. The coastal region of the sea cools at night
D. Cold air moving over warm water
537) The most likely reason for radiation fog to dissipate or become low stratus is :
A. an increasingly stable atmosphere.
B. surface cooling.
C. a low level temperature inversion.
D. increasing surface wind speed.
538) When does frontal fog, also known as mixing fog, occur?
A. When very humid warm air meets with very humid cold air.
B. When very humid warm air meets with dry cold air.
C. When very humid cold air meets with dry warm air.
D. When very dry cold air meets with very dry warm air.
539) Steaming fog (arctic sea smoke) occurs in air
A. with warm mass properties
B. that is absolutely stable
C. that is stable
D. with cold mass properties
65

540) What is the meaning of the abbreviation "BKN"?


A. 3 - 4 oktas.
B. 6 - 8 oktas.
C. 8 oktas.
D. 5 - 7 oktas.
541) The range of wind speed in which radiation fog is most likely to form is :
A. between 5 and 10 kt
B. above 15 kt
C. below 5 kt
D. between 10 and 15 kt
542) What flying conditions may be encountered when flying in cirrus clouds?
A. Average horizontal visibility less than 500 m; light to moderate icing.
B. Average horizontal visibility more than 1000 m; light to moderate rime ice.
C. Average horizontal visibility more than 1000 m; nil icing.
D. Average horizontal visibility less than 500 m; nil icing.
543) Clouds, fog or dew will always be formed when:
A. water vapour condenses.
B. water vapour is present.
C. relative humidity reaches 98%.
D. temperature and dew point are nearly equal.
545) In an area of converging air
A. clouds can not be formed
B. clouds can be formed
C. convective clouds can be dissolved
D. stratified clouds can be dissolved
546) Which of the following is a cause of stratus forming over flat land?
A. Unstable air.
B. Convection during the day.
C. The release of latent heat.
D. Radiation during the night from the earth surface in moderate wind.
547) Convective clouds are formed
A. in stable atmosphere
B. in summer during the day only
C. in mid-latitudes only
D. in unstable atmosphere
548) What type of cloud is being described ? A generally grey cloud layer with fairly uniform base and
uniform appearance, which may give drizzle or snow grains. When the sun is visible through the cloud,
the outline is clearly discernible. Sometimes it appears in the form of ragged patches.
A. Cirrostratus
B. Stratus
C. Altostratus
D. Nimbostratus
66

549) Which types of clouds are typical evidence of stable air conditions?
A. ST, AS
B. CU, CB
C. NS, CU
D. CB, CC
550) What type of clouds are associated with rain showers ?
A. Towering cumulus and altostratus.
B. Altostratus and stratus.
C. Nimbostratus.
D. Towering cumulus and cumulonimbus.
551) The rate of cooling of ascending saturated air is less than the rate of cooling of ascending
unsaturated air because:
A. water vapour doesn't cool as rapidly as dry air
B. water vapour absorbs the incoming heat from the sun
C. heat is released during the condensation process
D. moist air is heavier than dry air
552) Which of the following cloud types are most likely to produce light to moderate icing when they
are not subject to orographic lifting and consist of supercooled cloud droplets?
A. Stratocumulus and cirrostratus
B. Stratus and cumulonimbus
C. Altostratus and cirrocumulus
D. Altocumulus and altostratus.
553) Which of the following are medium level clouds ?
A. Cumulonimbus
B. All convective clouds
C. Altostratus and altocumulus
D. Cirrocumulus and cirrostratus
554) Frontal fog is most likely to occur
A. in winter in the early morning
B. in advance of a warm front
C. in rear of a warm front
D. in summer in the early morning
555) Which of the following is most likely to lead to the dissipation of radiation fog ?
A. A build up of a high pressure area resulting in adiabatic warming associated with a sinking air
mass
B. A marked increase in wind velocity near the ground
C. A marked decrease in wind velocity close to the ground
D. Ground cooling caused by radiation during the night
556) The following statements deal with precipitation, turbulence and icing. Select the list containing
the most likely alternatives for NS cloud:
A. Precipitation is frequently in the form of hail. Icing and turbulence are frequently severe.
B. Precipitation and icing are usually nil. Turbulence is rarely more than moderate.
67

C. Precipitation may be snow, sleet or rain. Icing is probable and may range between light and
severe. Turbulence is rarely more than moderate.
D. Precipitation may be snow, sleet or rain. Icing and turbulence are frequently severe.
557) n an unstable layer there are cumuliform clouds. The vertical extent of these clouds depends on
the I
A. thickness of the unstable layer
B. wind direction
C. air pressure at the surface
D. pressure at different levels
558) What are the differences between radiation fog and advection fog ?
A. Radiation fog forms only on the ground, advection fog only on the sea.
B. Radiation fog forms due to night cooling and advection fog due to daytime cooling.
C. Radiation fog is formed by surface cooling in a calm wind. Advection fog is formed by
evaporation over the sea.
D. Radiation fog forms due to surface cooling at night in a light wind. Advection fog forms when
warm humid air flows over a cold surface.
559) Which of the following is most likely to lead to the dissipation of radiation fog ?
A. A build-up of a high pressure area resulting in adiabatic warming associated with a sinking air
mass
B. A marked increase in wind velocity near the ground
C. A marked decrease in wind velocity close to the ground
D. Ground cooling caused by radiation during the night
560) The following statements deal with precipitation, turbulence and icing. Select the list containing
the most likely alternatives for NS cloud:
A. Precipitation is frequently in the form of hail. Icing and turbulence are frequently severe.
B. Precipitation and icing are usually nil. Turbulence is rarely more than moderate.
C. Precipitation may be snow, sleet or rain. Icing is probable and may range between light and
severe. Turbulence is rarely more than moderate.
D. Precipitation may be snow, sleet or rain. Icing and turbulence are frequently severe.
561) In an unstable layer there are cumuliform clouds. The vertical extent of these clouds depends on
the
A. thickness of the unstable layer
B. wind direction
C. air pressure at the surface
D. pressure at different levels

562. Drizzle occurs from


A. CS
B. ST
C. NS
D. CU
68

563. Altostratus (AS) is


A. Low cloud of sheet type
B. A medium cloud of sheet type
C. A cloud of large vertical growth
D. A high cloud of sheet type

564. Showers occurs from


A. CU
B. CB
C. AS
D. AC

565. Heavy icing is possible in


A. CI
B. CS
C. ST
D. CB

566. To avoid icing in cloudy conditions, a pilot is advised to fly through a cloud which shows an
optical phenomena
A. Halo
B. Corona
C. With multi-coloured clouds

567. Dark gray cloud giving continuous rain is called


A. AS
B. NS
C. ST
D. CB

568. A uniform layer of cloud resembling fog but not on the ground
A. AS
B. NS
C. ST

569. The clouds composed of ice crystals having feathery appearance


A. CI
B. CS
69

C. AS

570. NS clouds occur


A. At cold front
B. At warm front

571. Halo is associated with the cloud


A. AC
B. AS
C. CS
D. CI

572. Corona is associated with the cloud


A. AS
B. AC
C. CC
D. CS

573. Lenticular clouds indicate presence of


A. Warm Front
B. Cold front
C. Mountain waves

574. The lowest level below which condensation trails will not form is
A. Mintra Level
B. Drytra Level
C. Maxtra Level

575. Rain falling from cloud but not reaching ground is


A. Virgo
B. Virga
C. Mirage

576. CB with distinct anvil is called


A. Castellanus
B. Capillatus
C. Uncinus
70

577. Cloud ceiling is the height of the cloud covering


A. 3-4/8
B. 8/8
C. 5/8 or more

578. No condensation trails occur above


A. Maxtra Level
B. Dytra Level
C. Mintra Level

579. Cloud of operational significance has base below m or below the highest minimum sector
altitude, which is greater
A. 1500
B. 2000
C. 1000

580. AC cloud with cumuliform protuberances are indicative of


A. Stability
B. Instability
C. Neutrality

581. Hail may be experienced under the anvil of a CB


A. True
B. False

Precipitation
582) Freezing rain occurs when
A. snow falls into an above-freezing layer of air
B. rain falls into a layer of air with temperatures below 0°C
C. ice pellets melt
D. water vapour first turns into water droplets
583) Which form of precipitation from clouds containing only water is most likely to fall in mid-
latitudes?
A. Drizzle.
B. Moderate rain with large drops.
C. Heavy rain with large drops.
D. Hail.
71

584) How does freezing rain develop?


A. Rain falls through a layer where temperatures are below 0°C
B. Rain falls on cold ground and then freezes
C. Through melting of sleet grains
D. Through melting of ice crystals
585) Which of the following phenomena should be described as precipitation at the time they are
observed?
A. VA
B. BR
C. MIFG
D. +SHSN
586) Which of the following phenomena should be described as precipitation at the time they are
observed?
A. BCFG
B. FZFG
C. HZ
D. SN
587) Steady precipitation, in contrast to showery precipitation falls from
A. stratiform clouds with little or no turbulence
B. convective clouds with little or no turbulence
C. stratiform clouds with severe turbulence
D. convective clouds with moderate turbulence

588) Freezing precipitation occurs


A. only in the precipitation of a cold front
B. only in the precipitation of a warm front
C. mainly in the form of freezing hail or freezing snow
D. mainly in the form of freezing rain or freezing drizzle
589) Which one of the following types of cloud is most likely to produce heavy precipitation ?
A. NS.
B. CS.
C. SC.
D. ST.
590) A frontal depression passes through the airport. What form of precipitation do you expect ?
A. Rain or snow during about 12 hours until the warm front arrives. Within the warm sector the
rain increases. Improvement on the passage of the cold front.
B. Continuous rain or snow during 6 hours until the warm front arrives. The precipitation stops
for several hours within the warm sector. On the arrival of the cold front, showers within a
couple of hours.
C. Continuous rain or snow while the frontal wave passes for a period of some 24 hours.
D. Showers during some 2 hours until the warm front arrives. Drizzle in the warm sector within
12 hours. Rain or snow on the passage of the cold front.
72

591) Which of the following cloud types is least likely to produce precipitation ?
A. NS
B. CI
C. AS
D. CB
592) Precipitation in the form of showers occurs mainly from
A. cirro-type clouds
B. clouds containing only ice crystals
C. convective clouds
D. stratified clouds
593) Which of the following phenomena can produce a risk of aquaplaning?
A. SA
B. +RA
C. FG
D. BCFG

594. When super cooled water drops and ice particles co-exist, the ice crystals grow at the expense of
the water drops because
a. Saturation vapour pressure over water drops is less than over the ice crystals
b. Saturation vapour pressure over the ice crystals is less than over water drops
c. The ice crystals convert into water drops

595. The clouds whose tops extend well above the freezing level are called
a. Warm Clouds
b. Cold Clouds
c. Moderate Clouds

596. The clouds whose tops do not extend to the freezing level are called
a. Warm Clouds
b. Cold Clouds
c. Moderate Clouds

597. Coalescence Theory explains occurrence of rainfall from the


a. Warm Clouds
b. Cold Clouds
c. Both types of Clouds

598. Ice crystal Theory explains occurrence of rainfall from the


a. Warm Clouds
73

b. Cold Clouds
c. Both types of Clouds

599. Giant Nucleus Theory explains occurrence of rainfall over


a. Maritime areas
b. Inland areas
c. Hilly areas

600. Very heavy precipitation as showers over a short period is called


a. Flash floods
b. Cloud Burst
c. Orographic Rain

601. Rain shadow area is on the of the mountain range


a. Top
b. Windward side
c. Leeward side

602. Sleet is a mixture of


a. Hall & Snow
b. Rain & Snow
c. Frozen Rain

603. Rainfall in the tropics is more in


a. Winters
b. Summers
c. Post monsoon

604. Rainfall in the tropics is more in the


a. Morning
b. Afternoon
c. Night

605. Rainfall in the temperate latitudes is more in


a. Winters
b. Summers
c. Spring
74

606. Over J&K and western Himalayas Rainfall is more in


a. Winters
b. Summers
c. Post monsoon

607. Rainfall over coastal areas is more in the


a. Evening
b. Afternoon
c. Night & early morning

608. Areas to the of western Ghats of India are rain shadow areas
a. W
b. S
c. E

609. A sudden rise in the level of rivers or streams causing floods is called
a. Cloud Burst
b. Catchments flooding
c. Flash Floods

610. Artificial rain making is also termed as


a. Simulation
b. Cloud seeding
c. Nucleation

611. Fog can be dispersed for a short period by artificial stimulation


a. True
b. False

612. Showery precipitation occurs from


a. NS
b. AC
c. CB

613. A day is called Rainy day when rainfall in 24 hr is ....mm or more


a. 0.05
b. 1
75

c. 2

Visibility

614) When is the RVR reported at most airports?


A. When the RVR decreases below 800 m.
B. When the RVR decreases below 2000 m.
C. When the meteorological visibility decreases below 1500 m.
D. When the meteorological visibility decreases below 800 m.
615) What is the relationship between meteorological visibility (met.vis.) and RVR in homogeneous
fog?
A. The met. vis. is generally less than the RVR.
B. The met. vis. generally is greater than the RVR.
C. The met. vis. generally is the same as the RVR.
D. There is no specific relationship between the two.
617) Visibility is reduced by haze when
A. small water droplets are present
B. dust particles are trapped below an inversion
C. a light drizzle falls
D. a cold front just passed
618) Runway visual range can be reported in
A. a METAR
B. a TAF
C. a SIGMET
D. both a TAF and a METAR
619) Below a low level inversion visibility is often
A. moderate or poor because there is no vertical exchange
B. very good at night
C. very good in the early morning
D. moderate or poor due to heavy snow showers.
620) Flight visibility from the cockpit during approach in a tropical downpour can decrease to
minimal
A. about 500 metres
B. about 1000 metres
C. tens of metres
D. about 200 metres
621) In the vicinity of industrial areas, smoke is most likely to affect surface visibility when
A. there is a low level inversion
B. the surface wind is strong and gusty
C. cumulus clouds have developed in the afternoon
D. a rapid moving cold front has just passed the area
76

622) In unstable air, surface visibility is most likely to be restricted by


A. haze
B. drizzle
C. low stratus
D. showers of rain or snow
623) Runway visual range can be reported in
A. a METAR
B. a TAF
C. a SIGMET
D. both a TAF and a METAR

624. Fog is reported when visibility is reduced to


A. Less than 1000 m
B. 1000m
C. 1000 to 2000

625. RVR is reported when visibility falls below


A. 500 m
B. 1000 m
C. 1500 m
D. 2000 m

626. Radiation fog occurs


A. Over land
B. Over sea
C. During day

627. When visibility reduces between 5000 m and 1000 m and RH is almost 100%, it is
A. Mist
B. Haze
C. Fog

628. Radiation Fog forms over N India during


A. May to June
B. Dec to Feb
C. Oct to Nov

629. Warm and moist air moving over a cold ground gives rise to:
A. Thunder clouds
77

B. Fog and stratus


C. Frontal clouds

630. Warm and moist air moving over a cold surface causes
A. Radiation Fog
B. Advection Fog
C. Frontal Fog

631. The radiation fog forms due to


A. Heating of the earth during day
B. Radiational cooling of earth at night
C. Advection of cold air

632. The radiation fog activity increases after the passage of a...
A. WD
B. Depression
C. Col

633. Radiation fog is essentially a phenomena


A. Nocturnal
B. Dusk
C. Day

634. The radiation fog forms over


A. Water
B. Land
C. Both

635. The fog lorms due to horizontal movement of air


A. Radiation
B. Advection
C. Frontal

636. Advection fog forms during


A. night only
B. day time only
C. any time of day and night
78

637. For formation of Radiation fog


A. There should be sufficient moisture in atmosphere, cloudy sky, nil wind
B. There should be sufficient moisture in atmosphere, clear sky, light wind.
C. There should be sufficient moisture in atmosphere, cloudy sky, strong wind

638. Instrument used for measuring visibility...


a. Visiometer
b. Transmissometer
c. Ceilometer

639. Advection fog forms


A. over sea
B. over Land
C. both over land and sea

Icing

640) During the formation of rime ice in flight, water droplets freeze
A. A slowly and do not spread out
B. B slowly and spread out
C. C rapidly and spread out
D. rapidly and do not spread out

641) The most dangerous form of airframe icing is


A. clear ice.
B. hoar frost.
C. dry ice.
D. rime ice.
642) Hoar frost is most likely to form when
A. taking off from an airfield with a significant ground inversion.
B. flying inside convective clouds.
C. flying inside strati form clouds.
D. flying in super cooled drizzle.
79

643) A winter day in northern Europe with a thick layer of stratocumulus clouds and temperature
close to zero degrees C at ground level, you can expect:
A. A high probability for icing in clouds. Severe icing in the upper part due to accumulation of
large droplets.
B. Decreasing visibility due to snowfall below cloud base, but only light icing in clouds.
C. Reduced visibility and light icing in clouds
D. Turbulence due to a strong inversion, but no icing because clouds consist of ice crystals
644) Clear ice is dangerous because it
A. is not translucent and forms at the leading edges
B. spreads out and contains many air particles
C. is heavy and is difficult to remove from the aircraft surfaces
D. is translucent and only forms at the leading edges
645) At what degree of icing should ICAO's "Change of course and/or altitude desirable"
recommendation be followed?
A. Extreme
B. Moderate
C. Light
D. Severe
646) Supercooled droplets are always
A. at a temperature below -60°C
B. at a temperature below freezing
C. small and at a temperature below freezing
D. large and at a temperature below freezing
647) Supercooled droplets can occur in
A. clouds but not in precipitation
B. precipitation but not in clouds
C. clouds but not in fog
D. clouds, fog and precipitation
648) Which of the following statements is true regarding moderate-to-severe airframe icing?
A. It may occur in the uppermost levels of a cumulonimbus capillatus formation
B. It always occurs in altostratus cloud
C. It is likely to occur in nimbostratus cloud
D. It will occur in clear-sky conditions
649) In which environment is aircraft structural ice most likely to have the highest rate of accretion ?
A. Stratus clouds.
B. Snow.
C. Freezing rain.
D. Cirrus clouds.
650) Which of the following conditions is most likely to cause airframe icing ?
A. SHSN
B. PE
C. +FZRA
80

D. GR
651) A small supercooled cloud droplet that collides with an airfoil will most likely
A. freeze immediately and create clear ice.
B. travel back over the wing, creating rime ice.
C. travel back over the wing, creating clear ice.
D. freeze immediately and create rime ice.
652) Glaze or clear ice is formed when supercooled droplets are
A. large and at a temperature just below freezing
B. small and at a temperature just below freezing
C. small and freeze rapidly
D. of any size at temperatures below -35°C.
653) At what degree of icing should ICAO's "Change course and/or altitude immediately" instruction
be followed?
A. Severe
B. Light
C. Moderate
D. Extreme
654) Large supercooled water drops, which freeze on impact on an aircraft, form
A. rime ice
B. hoar frost
C. cloudy ice
D. clear ice
655) A vertical temperature profile indicates the possibility of severe icing when the temperature
profile
A. intersects the 0°C isotherm twice
B. coincides with a dry adiabatic lapse rate
C. indicates temperatures below -40°C
D. indicates temperatures above 3°C
656) What will be the effect on the reading of an altimeter of an aircraft parked on the ground shortly
before an active cold front passes?
A. It will be increasing.
B. It will remain unchanged.
C. It will be decreasing.
D. It will fluctuate up and down by about +/- 50 feet.
657) While descending through a cloud cover at high level, a small amount of a white and rough
powder like contamination is detected along the leading edge of the wing. This contamination is
called:
A. Rime ice.
B. Clear ice.
C. Mixed ice.
D. Frost.
81

658) In which of these cloud types can icing be virtually ruled out?
A. SC
B. NS
C. CS
D. AS
659) How does a pilot react to heavy freezing rain at 2000 FT/AGL, when he is unable to deice, nor
land?
A. He ascends to the cold air layer above.
B. He continues to fly at the same altitude.
C. He turns back before the aircraft loses manoeuvrability.
D. He descends to the warm air layer below.
660) How are high level condensation trails formed that are to be found occasionally behind jet
aircraft ?
A. Through water vapour released during fuel combustion
B. Through a decrease in pressure, and the associated adiabatic drop in temperature at the wing
tips while flying through relatively warm but humid air
C. Only through unburnt fuel in the exhaust gases
D. In conditions of low humidity, through the particles of soot contained in the exhaust gases
661) Which of the following statements is true regarding moderate-to-severe airframe icing?
A. It always occurs in altostratus cloud
B. It is unlikely to occur in nimbostratus cloud
C. It may occur in the uppermost levels of a cumulonimbus capillatus formation
D. It will not occur in clear-sky conditions
662) If you are flying at FL 120 and the outside temperature is -2°C, at what altitude will the "freezing
level" be?
A. FL 150
B. FL 90
C. FL 110
D. FL 130
663) Rime ice forms through the freezing onto aircraft surfaces of
A. small supercooled water drop.
B. large supercooled water drops.
C. water vapour.
D. snow.
664) A super-cooled droplet is one that
A. is at an above freezing temperature in below freezing air
B. remains liquid at a below freezing temperature
C. has frozen to become an ice pellet
D. has a shell of ice with water inside it
82

665) In which of the following conditions is moderate to severe airframe icing most likely to be
encountered?
A. Below the freezing level in clear air
B. In clear air above the freezing level
C. Within cloud of any type
D. In Nimbostratus cloud
666) Clear ice forms as a result of
A. water vapour freezing to the aircraft
B. ice pellets splattering on the aircraft
C. supercooled droplets freezing on impact
D. supercooled water droplets spreading during the freezing process
667) Clear ice forms on an aircraft by the freezing of :
A. small supercooled water drops
B. snow
C. large supercooled water drops
D. water vapour
668) In which of the following situations is an aircraft most susceptible to icing ?
A. Flying in heavy drizzle.
B. Level flight below a rain producing cloud when OAT is below zero degrees C.
C. Flying in dense cirrus clouds.
D. Level flight in snowfall below a nimbostratus layer.
669) Which one of the following statements concerning the formation of aircraft icing is most correct ?
A. Risk for icing increases when cloud temperature decreases well below minus 12 degrees C.
B. Probability of icing increases when dry snow starts to fall from a cloud.
C. A cloud consisting of both supercooled cloud droplets and ice crystals produces aircraft icing
D. Greatest risk of icing conditions is experienced in cirrus clouds.
670) Which of the following are favourable conditions for the formation of freezing rain?
A. An isothermal layer aloft with a temperature just above 0°C through which rain is falling.
B. Warm air aloft from which rain is falling into air with a temperature below 0°C.
C. Water droplets falling from cold air aloft with a temperature below 0°C.
D. Cold air aloft from which hail is falling into air that is warm.
671) Which of the following factors have the greatest effect on the formation of the various types of ice
on an aircraft ?
A. Cloud temperature and droplet size
B. Aircraft speed and size of cloud droplets
C. Aircraft speed and curvature of the air foil
D. Relative humidity inside the cloud
672) In which of these temperature bands is ice most likely to form on the aircraft's surface?
A. +10°C to 0°C
B. -20°C to -35°C
C. -35°C to -50°C
D. 0°C to -10°C
83

673) The type of icing that occurs in dense clouds with large supercooled drops that have a temperature
of -5°C is most likely to be
A. rime ice
B. cloudy ice
C. clear ice
D. hoar frost

674. Hoar frost occurs on airframe in clear air when the temperature of airframe is
a. below the frost point
b. frost point
c. just above the frost point

675. In clouds at temperatures below 0° C an aircraft may encounter icing of the type
a. only Glazed
b. only Rime
c. intermediate between these two

676. Opaque Rime ice is


a. Light porous
b. Solid
c. Mixture of porous and solid

677. Rime is formed by freezing of supercooled water droplets on airframe when aircraft is
flying through clouds
a. Small
b. Large
c. Medium

678. The ice poses serious aviation hazard


a. Rime
b. Hoar Frost
c. Glazed

679. Airframe icing occurs below 0°C. Its probability of occurrence decreases progressively below -
20 °C, as at lower temperatures the proportion of supercooled water drops in a cloud
a. Increases
b. Decreases
c. Does not change
84

680. CI, CS and CC clouds consist mostly ice crystals. Icing hazard is therefore
a. Maximum
b. Medium
c. Negligible

681. AS, NS consist of supercooled water drops and ice crystals in varying proportion icing is
possible.
a. Maximum
b. Light or moderate
c. Negligible

682. In AC clouds ………….. icing is likely in mountainous areas


a. Severe
b. Light to moderate
c. Negligible

683. In TCU icing may range from light to severe type at.least up to level.
a. - 40 °C level
b. 30 °C level
c. - 20 °C level

684. In CB icing may range from light to severe type up to -20°C level. Below this temperature severe
icing is
d. not significant
e. significant
f. maximum

685. Liquid water content is an important factor in icing. As the maximum water concentration is
around , maximum ice formation in clouds may also be expected around that level.
a. -25° C level
b. -20° C level
c. -15° C level

686. Carburetor icing occurs when air from intake passes through a ventury (choke) and causes
expansional cooling and vaporization of fuel. Serious icing can occur at extreme temperatures
a. 13 °C
b. 30°C to -10°C
c. 20 °C
85

687. occurs in a moist cloudless air on an aircraft surface having temp, below 0° C, due to sublimation
of water vapour onto feathery ice crystals.
a. Rime
b. Glazed
c. Hoar Frost

688. occurs in St, Sc, Ac, Cu, Ns at temperature -10 to -40° C and in Cb at temperature -20 to -40°C
a. Rime
b. Glazed
c. Hoar Frost

689. In clouds ………… occurs when a wide range of water drop sizes are present at temperatures
between 0° C and -40° C
a. Rime
b. Glazed
c. Mixture of rime and clear ice

690. occurs in AS, NS, SC and towering CU or CB between 0° C and -20° C, in warm front below 0°
C, especially if the aircraft has rapidly descended from a colder region
a. Glazed
b. Fume
c. Mixture of Rime and Clear ice

691. When fog freezes on parked aircraft it produces..,


a. Hoar Frost
b. Hoar Frost
c. Clear ice

692. Icing the stalling speed appreciably


a. Decreases
b. Increases
c. Does not increase/decrease
86

Thunderstorm

693) What is the likely track for a hurricane in the Carribean area?
A. West deep into the USA.
B. West in the earlier stages and later turning south east.
C. West in the earlier stages and later turning north east.
D. East then south.
694) With which type of cloud are tornadoes normally associated?
A. Cumulus
B. Stratus
C. Nimbostratus
D. Cumulonimbus
695) Which of the statements is true concerning squall lines ?
A. Severe squall lines always move from northwest to southeast
B. For severe squall lines a SIGMET is issued
C. Severe squall lines only occur in the tropics
D. For severe squall lines a TAF is issued
696) What are the requirements for the formation of a thunderstorm?
A. A stratocumulus cloud with sufficient moisture
B. A cumulus cloud with sufficient moisture associated with an inversion
C. An adequate supply of moisture, conditional instability and a lifting action
D. Water vapour and high pressure
697) A microburst
A. occurs only in tropical areas
B. has a diameter up to 4 km
C. has a life time of more than 30 minutes
D. is always associated with thunderstorms
698) A squall line usually is most likely to be encountered
A. at an occluded front
B. in an airmass with cold mass properties
C. behind of a stationary front
D. ahead of a cold front
690) Which of the following statements is an interpretation of the SIGMET ? SIGMET VALID
121420/121820 embed ts obs and fast in w part of athinai fir / mov e / intst nc =
A. Athens Airport is closed due to thunderstorms. The thunderstorm zone should be east of
Athens by 1820 UTC
B. The thunderstorms in the Athens FIR are increasing in intensity, but are stationary above the
western part of the Athens FIR
C. Thunderstorms must be expected in the western part of the Athens FIR. The thunderstorm
zone is moving east. Intensity is constant
D. Thunderstorms have formed in the eastern part of the Athens FIR and are slowly moving west
87

691) What is the approximate maximum diameter of a microburst ?


A. 20 km
B. 50 km
C. 4 km
D. 400 m
692) Which thunderstorms move forward the fastest?
A. Thunderstorms formed by lifting processes.
B. Thermal thunderstorms.
C. Orographic thunderstorms.
D. Frontal thunderstorms.
693) In addition to a lifting action, what are two other conditions necessary for thunderstorm
formation ?
A. Stable conditions and low atmospheric pressure
B. Unstable conditions and low atmospheric pressure
C. Unstable conditions and high moisture content
D. Stable conditions and high moisture content
694) During which months is the Hurricane season in the Caribbean?
A. April until July.
B. July until November.
C. October until January.
D. January until April.
695) Which statement is true for hurricanes in the North Atlantic?
A. The diameter is 50-500 m
B. Their greatest frequency of occurrence is in winter
C. From the earth's surface up to the tropopause the core is warmer than its surroundings
D. They intensify rapidly after landfall
696) In Central Europe when is the greatest likelihood for thunderstorms due to warm updrafts?
A. Late morning.
B. Mid - afternoon.
C. Around midnight.
D. Early morning.
697) During which stage of thunderstorm development are rotor winds characterized by roll clouds
most likely to occur ?
A. Cumulus stage and mature stage.
B. Mature stage.
C. Cumulus stage.
D. Dissipating stage.
698) Thunderstorms in exceptional circumstances can occur in a warm front if
A. the cold air is convectively stable.
B. the warm air is convectively stable.
C. the warm air is convectively unstable.
D. the cold air is convectively unstable.
88

699) In which of the following areas is the highest frequency of thunderstorms encountered ?
A. Temperate
B. Tropical
C. Polar
D. Subtropical
700) Thunderstorms can occur on a warm front if the
A. warm air is moist and the environmental lapse rate exceeds the saturated adiabatic lapse rate
B. cold air is moist and the environmental lapse rate is less than the dry adiabatic lapse rate
C. warm air is moist and the environmental lapse rate is less than the saturated adiabatic lapse rate
D. cold air is moist and the environmental lapse rate exceeds the saturated adiabatic lapse rate
701) What are squall lines?
A. The paths of tropical revolving storms.
B. Bands of intensive thunderstorms.
C. Unusual intensive cold fronts.
D. The surface weather associated with upper air troughs.
702) What is the track most likely to be taken by a hurricane in the Carribean area?
A. West deep into the U.S.
B. West in the earlier stages and later south east
C. West in the earlier stages and later north east
D. East
703) Which of the following meteorological phenomenon indicates upper level instability which may
lead to thunderstorm development ?
A. Halo.
B. Red cirrus.
C. AC castellanos.
D. AC lenticularis.
704) At what time of the year are tornadoes most likely to occur in North America?
A. Summer, autumn.
B. Autumn, winter.
C. Winter.
D. Spring, summer.
705) Isolated thunderstorms of a local nature are generally caused by
A. frontal lifting (warm front).
B. frontal lifting (cold front).
C. frontal occlusion.
D. thermal triggering.

706. The condition necessary for the formation of a thunderstorm are:


a. Steep lapse rate, strong winds
b. shallow lapse rate, adequate supply of moisture
c. Steps lapse rate ,adequate supply of moisture and trigger action.
89

707. Hail is most likely to fall from a cloud


a. Having layers
b. Composed of Ice crystals
c. Having strong vertical development

708. Nor westers are


a. The western disturbances which affect NW India
b. Severe thunderstorms which occur over NE India during hot weather periot
c. Severe thunderstorms which occur over Peninsula during hot weather perioc

709. Duststorm usually occurs over NW India during


a. Post-monsoon
b. Winter
c. Pre-Monsoon

710. A 'mature' thunderstorm has


a. A strong updraft only
b. Strong downdraft only
c. Strong updrafts and downdrafts

711. Aircraft icing is most favoured in the cloud which have temperatures ranging between
a. 20° C and - 40° C
b. 0° C and - 20° C
c. below -40 ° C

712. A short duration, showery precipitation is associated with


a. ST
b. AS
c. CB

713.

714. The most hazardous cloud for aviation is Hail is


a. Solid precipitation which commonly occurs over the mountainous regions during winter.
b. Frozen or partly frozen rain falling from sheet type of clouds
c. Solid precipitation falling from a deep convective cloud
90

a. CB
b. CU
c. NS

715. The life of a Cb cell is usually


a. 7 to 8 hrs
b. 3 to 4 hrs
c. 1/2 - 1 hr

716. Generally the severest activity of a CB clouds is for


a. 2 hrs
b. 30 to 45 min
c. 3 to 4 hr

717. Norwesters occur during


a. Jan-Feb
b. Mar-May
c. June-Sep
d. Oct - Dec

718. Norwesters occur during


a. Winter
b. Hot weather
c. Monsoon
d. Post Monsoon

719. Norwesters affect


a. N India
b. Bengal, Bihar, Orissa and Assam
c. Central India

720. The trigger action may take place due ro


a. Clear night sky no wind
b. Orographic lifting
c. Divergence due to high pressure

721. Norwesters normally occur during


91

a. Mornings
b. Afternoons
c. Nights

722. Norwesters originates over


a. Chota-Nagpur hills
b. Deccan Plato
c. Khasi hills

723. Andhi (blinding storms) occur generally over


a. S India
b. N India
c. NE India

724. Wind speed in Light DS is


a. 25 kr
b. 30 kt
c. up to 21 kt

725. The diametre of Microburst is


a. less than 4 km
b. less than 2 km
c. less than 6 km

726. The diametre of and Macroburst


a. < 4 km
b. 4 km or more
c. > 8 km

727. For detecting precipitation a Radar wavelength in the range ... is suitable
a. 30 to 200 mm
b. 400-500 mm
c. 600-700 mm

728. For airborne radars wavelength generally used


a. 20 mm
b. 40 mm
92

c. 60 mm

729. The wavelength of TS detection X band radar is


a. 10 mm
b. 20 mm
c. 30 mm

730. The wavelength of storm detection S band radar is


a. 50 mm
b. 100 ram
c. 200 mm

731. Over plains TS mostly occur during the


a. afternoon
b. night
c. early morning

732. Over valley and foot hills TS generally occur during


a. afternoon
b. night & early morning

733. Over the sea TS are more frequent


a. afternoon
b. night
c. early morning

734. The life of Mesoscale Convective Complex TS is


a. 2-3 hr
b. 3-4 hr
c. 6 to 24 hr

735. Loud peals of thunder, frequent flashes of lightning, moderate or heavy showers accompanied by
light hail with maximum wind speed 15-40 kt is classified as
a. Light TS
b. Moderate TS
c. Severe TS

736. For a severe TS one of the requirements is strong wind shear


93

a. Horizontal
b. Vertical
c. Slant

737. Severe TS cells are tilted


a. in vertical
b. to the South
c. to the North

Clear Air Turbulence

738) Under which of the following conditions is the most severe CAT likely to be experienced?
A. A westerly jet stream at low latitudes in the summer
B. A straight jet stream near a low-pressure area
C. A curved jet stream near a deep trough
D. A jet stream, with great spacing between the isotherms
739) All pilots encountering Clear Air Turbulence are requested to report it. You experience CAT
which causes passengers and crew to feel definite strain against their seat belt or shoulders straps.
Unsecured objects are dislodged. Food service and walking are difficult. This intensity of CAT should
be reported as
A. severe
B. extreme
C. moderate
D. light
740) In which meteorological forecast chart is information about CAT regions found?
A. 300 hPa chart.
B. Significant Weather Chart.
C. 24-hour surface forecast.
D. 500 hPa chart.
741) The Jetstream and associated clear air turbulence can sometimes be visually identified in flight
by
A. long streaks of cirrus clouds.
B. dust or haze at high level
C. a constant outside air temperature
D. a high-pressure centre at high level
742) How does moderate turbulence affect an aircraft?
A. Large, abrupt changes in altitude or attitude occur but the aircraft may only be out of control
momentarily.
B. Continued flight in this environment will result in structural damage.
C. Changes in altitude or attitude occur but the aircraft remains in positive control at all times.
94

D. Rapid and somewhat rhythmic bumpiness is experienced without appreciable changes in


altitude or attitude.
743) On a clear summer day, turbulence caused by solar heating is most pronounced
A. during early morning hours before sunrise
B. about midmorning
C. during the early afternoon
D. immediately after sunset
744) Which of the following causes echoes on meteorological radar screens?
A. Water vapour
B. Fog
C. Any cloud
D. Hail
745) In which zone of a jet stream is the strongest CAT to be expected?
A. The warm air side of the core.
B. Exactly in the centre of the core.
C. About 12000 FT above the core.
D. The cold air side of the core.
746) What is normally the most effective measure to reduce or avoid CAT effects?
A. Change of flight level.
B. Change of course.
C. Increase of speed.
D. Decrease of speed.
747) The turbulence which occurs at high flight levels (above FL 250) is mainly of the type Clear Air
Turbulence. In what way can moderate to severe Clear Air Turbulence affect an aircraft, the flight and
the passengers?
A. The turbulence is wave like which makes the flight unpleasant for the passengers but the
manoeuvring will not be affected essentially.
B. The turbulence is a small scale one and can cause damage of worn out type. The manoeuvring
of the aircraft will be made more difficult or even impossible. For the passengers the flight will
be unpleasant.
C. The turbulence is a large scale one (waving) so that the aircraft will be difficult to manoeuvre.
The passengers will feel some discomfort.
D. The turbulence can be resembled with the roughness of a washing-board (small scale) and will
not have influence on the aircraft and its solidity, but will make flight a little more difficult.
The passengers will seldom notice anything of this turbulence.

748. For mountain waves to form there should be flow of air across the ridge, generally within
……………of the perpendicular to the ridge.
a. 30°
b. 45°
c. 60°
95

749. For mountain waves to form the wind speed for small mountains should be atleast
a. 15 m/s
b. 10 m/s
c. 7m/s

750. For mountain waves to form the wind speed for large mountains should be atleast
a. 15 m/s
b. 10 m/s
c. 7m/s

751. For mountain waves to form the atmosphere should be up to the ridge, where air stream
strikes the ridge.
a. Unstable
b. Stable
c. Indifferent

752. For mountain waves to form the atmosphere should be at higher levels above the ridge
a. Unstable
b. Stable
c. Indifferent

753. In Mountain waves the Rotor clouds form in


a. Troughs
b. Ridges
c. Valley

754. Clear air turbulence is often encountered


a. At the boundary of a jet stream
b. In the wake of a passing airplane
c. In the wake of a larger airplane at take off and landing
d. All of the above

755. Most CAT occurs on the of a jet stream and in the vicinity of upper level frontal zones where
temperature contrasts are strong.
a. Fringes
b. Within the core
96

c. Axis

756. CAT is the bumpiness experienced by aircraft at high altitudes in either cloud-free
conditions or in stratiform clouds
a. above 18,000 feet
b. below 18,000 feet
c. below 28,000 feet

757. When approaching an area where mountain waves have been reported, a pilot should expect:
a. Possible presence of roll clouds and lenticular clouds
b. Intense up drafts and down drafts on the lee side of the mountains
c. Moderate to severe turbulence as far as 20 to 30 miles from the range on lee side
d. All of the above
97

Jet Streams
758) Where, as a general rule, is the core of the polar front jet stream to be found?
A. In the warm air mass.
B. In the cold air mass.
C. Just above the warm-air tropopause.
D. Just below the cold-air tropopause.
759) A wind speed of 350 kt within a jet stream core should be world-wide regarded as:
A. a common occurrence.
B. not unusual in polar regions.
C. possible but a very rare phenomenon.
D. not possible.
760) What is the minimum speed for a wind to be classified as a jet stream?
A. 100 kt.
B. 60 kt.
C. 50 kt.
D. 70 kt.
761) On a particular day part of a polar front jet stream runs from north to south in the northern
hemisphere. This means that
A. below the core of the jet the horizontal temperature gradient runs from north to south
B. above the core of the jet the horizontal temperature gradient runs from north to south
C. the polar air is below and to the east of the core of the jet
D. the polar air is on the eastern side and above the core of the jet
762) What is the main cause for the formation of a polar front jet stream?
A. The pressure difference, close to the ground, between a high over the Azores and a low over
Iceland
B. The varied elevations of the tropopause in the polar front region
C. Strong winds in the upper atmosphere
D. The north-south horizontal temperature gradient at the polar front
763) An aircraft is flying through the polar front jet stream from south to north, beneath the core. How
would the OAT change, in the northern hemisphere, during this portion of the flight?
A. It remains constant.
B. It decreases.
C. It increases.
D. It first increases, then decreases.
764) Supercooled droplets can be encountered
A. only in winter above 10000 FT
B. only in winter at high altitude
C. at any time of the year
D. in winter only in high clouds
.
98

765) An aircraft is flying from south to north, above the polar front jet stream, at FL 400 in the
southern hemisphere. What change, if any, in temperature will be experienced ?
A. It stays the same.
B. It falls and then rises.
C. It falls.
D. It rises.
766) Which jet stream blows all year round, over the northern hemisphere?
A. The arctic jet stream.
B. The subtropical jet stream.
C. The polar night jet stream.
D. The equatorial jet stream.
767) You cross a jet stream in horizontal flight at approximately right angles. While crossing, in spite
of a strong wind of 120 kt, you notice the temperature barely changes.
A. This phenomenon is absolutely normal as you are crossing the jet core.
B. You assume the front associated with the jet stream to be very weak with practically no
temperature difference between the two air masses.
C. Since the result of such readings seems impossible, you will after landing have the
instruments tested.
D. This phenomenon does not surprise you at all, since normally no large temperature
differences are possible at these heights.
768) Which jet stream is connected with a surface front system?
A. The equatorial jet stream
B. The polar front jet stream
C. The arctic jet stream
D. The subtropical jet stream

769) What jet streams are likely to be crossed during a flight from Stockholm to Rio de Janeiro (23°S)
at FL 350 in July ?
A. One subtropical jet stream.
B. A polar front jet stream followed by one or two subtropical jet streams.
C. A subtropical jet stream followed by a polar front jet stream.
D. A polar front jet stream followed by a subtropical jet stream and later, a second polar front jet
stream.
770) Most strong air currents at higher levels (jet streams) have a westerly direction. There is, however,
an important easterly jet stream. When and where is it likely to be encountered ?
A. In summer from the Middle East extending over the southern part of the Mediterranean to
southern Spain.
B. Throughout the year to the south of the Azorean high.
C. In summer from south-east Asia extending over southern India to central Africa.
D. In winter along the Russian coast facing the Arctic ocean.
99

771) What is the most significant difference between an equatorial jet stream and all the other jet
streams?
A. Wind direction.
B. Vertical dimension.
C. Horizontal dimension.
D. Windspeed.
772) What is the approximate ratio between height and width for a jet stream cross section?
A. 1/100
B. 1/1
C. 1/10
D. 1/1000
773) Which of the following statements concerning the core of a polar front jet stream is correct ?
A. It and its surface projection lie in the warm air B
B. It lies in the warm air; its pressure surfaces are horizontal at the height of the core
C. It lies in the cold air; the thermal wind reverses direction at the height of the core
D. It lies at a height where there is no horizontal temperature gradient; the slope of the pressure
surfaces at the height of the core is at its maximum
774) The equatorial easterly jet is a jet stream that occurs :
A. during the whole year in the northern hemisphere
B. only in the summer of the northern hemisphere at approx. 45 000 FT
C. only in the winter of the northern hemisphere at approx. 30 000 FT
D. during the whole year in the southern hemisphere
775) Which of the following types of jet streams can be observed all year round?
A. Subtropical jet stream / polar front jet stream.
B. Equatorial jet stream / polar front jet stream.
C. Arctic jet stream / subtropical jet stream.
D. Equatorial jet stream / arctic jet stream.
776) Which area of a polar front jet stream in the northern hemisphere has the highest probability of
turbulence?
A. Looking downstream, the area to the left of the core.
B. Looking downstream, the area to the right of the core.
C. In the core of the jet stream.
D. Above the core in the boundary between warm and cold air.

777. The arbitrary lower limit of jet core velocity has been assigned by WMO as
a. 60 kt
b. 60 m/s
c. 70 m/s
100

778. Jet stream has


a. one maxima
b. one or more maxima
c. only two maxima

779. The vertical wind shear in a Jet stream is about


a. 5m/s/ km
b. 6m/s/km
c. 8m/s/km

780. Compared to horizontal wind shear the vertical wind shear in a Jet stream is
a. weaker
b. stronger
c. same

781. In a jet stream, the path of the maximum speed is known as


a. Core
b. Axis
c. Jet streak

782. The wind speed along the axis of a jet stream is always
a. Uniform
b. Not uniform

783. Along the axis of a jet stream there are centres of high speed winds, these are called
a. Jet streaks
b. Core
c. Axis

784. In a wavy jet the Jet streaks are located over or near the
a. Ridge
b. Trough
c. Between Trough and Ridge

785. Sub-tropical Jet Stream (STJ) is


a. Westerly
b. Easterly
101

c. Southerly

786. The normal position of Sub-tropical Jet Stream is


a. 30° N
b. 27° N
c. 35° N

787. The southern most position of STJ is in February is


a. 22° N
b. 20° N
c. 18° N

788. The STJ affects India from


a. Jun to Jul
b. Oct to May
c. Aug to Sep

789. STJ has a layered structure. There are often two layers of maximum wind to the...of jet core
a. S
b. N
c. SW

790. The STJ strengthens


a. Northwards
b. Upstream
c. Downstream

791. At and near the STJ the temperature gradient is very


a. Small
b. Large
c. Moderate

792. Vertical wind shear in STJ is greater the core


a. above
b. below
c. along
102

793. The TJ prevails over the Indian Peninsula from


a. May to Jun
b. Sep to Oct
c. Jun to Aug

794. The TJ is located over the Indian Peninsula, approximately at


a. 13° N
b. 17° N
c. 18° N

795. The TJ is located over Indian, approximately at a height of[Type an answer here.]
a. 15 -16 km
b. 12 - 13 km
c. 11 - 12 km

796. The TJ is strongest in


a. July - Aug
b. Sep - Oct
c. June

797. In the TJ the wind shears are much than the STJ
a. more
b. less
c. same

798. TJ is
a. Westerly
b. Easterly
c. Southerly
103

Mountain Waves

799) Which of the following conditions are most favourable to the formation of mountain waves ?
A. Unstable air at mountain top altitude and a wind at least 20 knots blowing across the
mountain ridge.
B. Either stable or unstable air at mountain top and a wind of at least 30 knots blowing parallel
to the mountain ridge.
C. Moist unstable air at mountain top and wind of less than 5 knots blowing across the mountain
ridge.
D. Stable air at mountain top altitude and a wind at least 20 knots blowing across the mountain
ridge.
800) Which of the following phenomena are formed when a moist, stable layer of air is forced to rise
against a mountain range?
A. Stratified cloud
B. Inversions
C. Showers and thunderstorms
D. Areas of severe turbulence
801) At the top of orographic waves, in mountainous regions, the cloud most likely to be encountered
is
A. cirrus.
B. cumulus mediocris.
C. altocumulus lenticularis.
D. cirrostratus.
802) The presence of altocumulus lenticularis is an indication of the
A. development of thermal lows
B. presence of valley winds
C. presence of mountain waves
D. risk of orographic thunderstorms
803) Which weather condition lowers true altitude as compared to pressure altitude to a position where
flight over mountains could be dangerous?
A. Warm depression.
B. Cold high.
C. Warm high.
D. Cold low.
104

Air Mass

804) Which thunderstorms generally develop in the afternoon in summer over land in moderate
latitudes?
A. Airmass thunderstorms
B. Warm front thunderstorms
C. Cold mass thunderstorms
D. Occlusion thunderstorms
805) Which of the following statements is true of the dew point of an air mass?
A. It can only be equal to, or lower, than the temperature of the air mass
B. It can be higher than the temperature of the air mass
C. It can be used together with the air pressure to estimate the air mass's relative humidity
D. It can be used to estimate the air mass's relative humidity even if the air temperature is
unknown
806) What process in an air mass leads to the creation of wide spread NS, AS and ST cloud coverage?
A. Convection process
B. Radiation
C. Lifting
D. Sinking
807) An air mass is called stable when
A. the pressure in a given area is constant
B. the environmental lapse rate is high, with little vertical motion of air currents
C. the vertical motion of rising air tends to become weaker and disappears
D. the temperature in a given air mass decreases rapidly with height
808) What cloud formation is most likely to occur at low levels when a warm air mass overrides a
cold air mass?
A. Nimbostratus.
B. Cumulus.
C. Altostratus.
D. Cumulonimbus.
809) An airmass is unstable when
A. an ascending parcel of air continues to rise to a considerable height.
B. temperature and humidity are not constant
C. pressure shows a marked variation over a given horizontal area
D. temperature increases with height
810) If a saturated air mass descends down a slope its temperature increases at
A. a lower rate than in dry air, as condensation gives out heat.
B. a higher rate than in dry air, as it gives up latent evaporation heat.
C. a lower rate than in dry air, as evaporation absorbs heat.
D. the same rate as if the air mass were dry.
105

811. The air mass which originates at sea in low Latitudes is called
a. Polar maritime
b. Tropical continental
c. Tropical maritime

812. The air mass which originates over equatorial region is


a. Warm & dry
b. Warm & Moist
c. Cold & dry

813. If the advancing cold front is colder than the cool air mass of the warm front, the advancing cold
front undercuts and lifts both the warm and cool air masses of the warm front. This is
a. Warm Occlusion
b. Cold Occlusion

814. The airmass which originated over land area located in polar region:
a. Warm & dry
b. Warm & Moist
c. Cold & dry

815. If a warm airmass overtakes a cold air mass, it is called


a. Cold Front
b. Warm Front
c. Occluded Front

816. At warm front


a. Warm air overtakes the cold air
b. Cold air undercuts the warm air

817. The conditions are always unstable at


a. Cold front
b. Warm front

818. Line squall occurs about 100-300 km ahead of


a. Warm front
b. Cold front
106

819. Precipitation occurs over a belt of 30 - 50 km on both side of front


a. Cold front
b. Warm front

820. Cold front moves at ... the speed of a warm front moves
a. Same
b. Double
c. Half

821. Line Squalls occur of Cold front


a. Ahead
b. Behind
c. At the

822. Fronts are associated with


a. Tropical cyclone
b. Monsoon Depression
c. Extra-tropical Cyclones

823. CB, Roll-type clouds, SC, AC with embedded CB are associated


a. Cold front
b. Warm front

824. The Surface of discontinuity between the Polar Easterlies and the temperate Westerlies is called
a. Equatorial Front
b. Tropopause
c. Polar Front

825. The air mass which originates from sea area located in lower Lat is
a. Warm & Dry
b. Warm & Moist
c. Cold & Moist

826. WDs approach India as


a. Cols
b. Occluded Fronts
c. Highs
107

827. Maximum WDs occur in


a. Summers
b. Post Monsoon
c. Winters

828. Ahead of a warm front the surface wind


a. Backs & weakens
b. Veers & strengthens
c. Backs & strengthens

829. On approach of a Warm Front temperature


a. Fall
b. Rise
c. Remain same

830. CI, CS, AS, NS, ST in sequence are associated with the front
a. Warm
b. Cold
c. Occluded

831. During the passage of a Cold Front winds


a. Suddenly become squally
b. Back and weaken
c. Veer and are of moderate strength

832. Visibility is poor in a Warm Front


a. Ahead
b. Ahead & During
c. After & During

833. Fog occurs in Cold Front


a. Ahead
b. During
c. After
108

834. WD is a……….. front


a. Cold
b. Warm
c. Occluded

835. FZRA and FZFG occur of a warm front


a. Ahead
b. During
c. After

836. Precipitation ceases after the passage of a front


a. Cold
b. Warm
c. Occluded

837. During the approach of a Warm Front wind


a. Backs
b. Veers
c. Does not change

838. Whenever the low of a WD has two or more closed isobars, at 2 hPa interval, it is termed as
a. Troughs in Westerlies
b. Western Depression
c. Western Cyclone

Fronts
839) In a warm front occlusion
A. the warm front overtakes the cold front
B. the warm front becomes a front aloft
C. the cold air is lifted
D. the warm air is lifted
840) In which of the following regions does polar maritime air originate ?
A. Baltic Sea
B. Black Sea
C. East of Greenland
D. Region of British Isles
109

841) What weather conditions are prevalent during the summer, over the North Sea, approximately
300 km behind a quickly moving cold front?
A. Cloud cover mostly scattered, isolated showers.
B. Showers and thunderstorms.
C. Rain covering a large area, 8 octas NS.
D. 8 octas CS, AS without precipitation.
842) In which air mass are extremely low temperatures encountered?
A. Arctic maritime air.
B. Polar continental air.
C. Polar maritime air.
D. Tropical continental air.
843) What type of front / occlusion usually moves the fastest?
A. Warm occlusion.
B. Cold front.
C. Warm front.
D. Cold occlusion.
844) What types of cloud will you meet flying towards a warm front?
A. At some 500 km from the front, groups of CB, later at some 250 km thickening AS
B. At some 800 km CS, later AS, and at some 300 km NS until the front
C. Extensive areas of fog. At some 100 km from the front NS begin
D. At some 500 km AS, later CS and at some 80 km before the front CB
845) How do air masses move at a warm front?
A. Cold air overrides a warm air mass
B. Cold air undercuts a warm air mass
C. Warm air undercuts a cold air mass
D. Warm air overrides a cold air mass
846) What degree of turbulence, if any, is likely to be encountered while flying through a cold front in
the summer over Central Europe at FL 100?
A. Moderate turbulence in NS cloud.
B. Light turbulence in CB cloud.
C. Light turbulence in ST cloud.
D. Severe turbulence in CB cloud.
847) In which approximate direction does the centre of a frontal depression move?
A. In the direction of the warm sector isobars.
B. In the direction of the isobars ahead of the warm front.
C. In the direction of the sharpest pressure increase.
D. In the direction of the isobars behind the cold front.
848) What is the type, intensity and seasonal variation of precipitation in the equatorial region ?
A. Warm front are common with continuous rain. The frequency is the same throughout the year
B. Precipitation is generally in the form of showers but continuous rain occurs also. The greatest
intensity is in July.
C. Showers of rain or hail occur throughout the year; the frequency is highest in January.
110

D. Rain showers, hail showers and thunderstorms occur the whole year, but frequency is highest
during two periods: April-May and October-November.
849) Which of the following is typical for the passage of a cold front in the summer ?
A. Rapid increase in temperature once the front has passed
B. Mainly towering clouds
C. Mainly layered clouds
D. Rapid drop in pressure once the front has passed
850) The polar front is the boundary between:
A. polar air and tropical air.
B. arctic air and polar air.
C. arctic air and tropical air.
D. maritime polar air and continental polar air.
851) Extensive cloud and precipitation is often associated with a non frontal thermal depression
because of :
A. surface divergence and upper level convergence causing widespread descent of air in the
depression
B. surface divergence and upper level convergence causing widespread ascent of air in the
depression
C. surface convergence and upper level divergence causing widespread ascent of air in the
depression
D. surface convergence and upper level divergence causing widespread descent of air in the
depression
852) When do cold occlusions occur most frequently in Europe?
A. Summer
B. Winter
C. Autumn and winter
D. Winter and spring
853) The approximate inclined plane of a warm front is:
A. 1/150
B. 1/50
C. 1/300
D. 1/500
854) What type of precipitation would you expect at an active unstable cold front?
A. Freezing rain
B. Light to moderate continuous rain
C. Drizzle
D. Showers associated with thunderstorms
855) What is the relative movement of the two airmasses along a cold front ?
A. Cold air slides over a warm air mass
B. Warm air pushes under a cold air mass
C. Cold air pushes under a warm air mass
D. Warm air pushes over a cold air mass
111

856) Frontal depressions can be assumed to move in the direction of the 2000 feet wind
A. behind the cold front
B. at the apex of the wave
C. in the warm sector
D. in front of the warm front
857) What characterizes a stationary front ?
A. The warm air moves at approximately half the speed of the cold air
B. The weather conditions that it originates is a combination between those of an intense cold front
and those of a warm and very active front
C. The surface wind usually has its direction parallel to the front
D. The surface wind usually has its direction perpendicular to the front
858) What type of low pressure area is associated with a surface front?
A. A low on lee side of a mountain.
B. Heat low.
C. Polar front low.
D. A cold air pool.
859) What will be the effect on the reading of an altimeter of an aircraft parked on the ground as an
active cold front is passing?
A. It will remain unchanged.
B. It will first decrease then increase.
C. It will fluctuate up and down by about +/- 50 feet.
D. It will first increase then decrease.
860) Read this description: "After such a fine day, the ring around the moon was a bad sign yesterday
evening for the weather today. And, sure enough, it is pouring down outside. The clouds are making an
oppressively low ceiling of uniform grey; but at least it has become a little bit warmer." Which of these
weather phenomena is being described?
A. A blizzard
B. Weather at the back of a cold front
C. A cold front
D. A warm front
861) Extensive cloud and precipitation is often associated with a non frontal thermal depression
because of :
A. surface divergence and upper level convergence causing widespread descent of air in the
depression
B. surface divergence and upper level convergence causing widespread ascent of air in the
depression
C. surface convergence and upper level divergence causing widespread ascent of air in the
depression
D. surface convergence and upper level divergence causing widespread descent of air in the
depression
862) When do cold occlusions occur most frequently in Europe?
A. Summer
B. Winter
112

C. Autumn and winter


D. Winter and spring
863) Where is the coldest air to be found, in an occlusion with cold front characteristics?
A. At the surface position of the front.
B. At the junction of the occlusion.
C. Behind the front.
D. Ahead of the front.

Inter-Tropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ)

864) What name is given to the low level wind system between the subtropical high pressure belt and
the equatorial trough of low pressure (ITCZ)?
A. Monsoon.
B. Trade winds.
C. Doldrums.
D. Westerly winds.
865) Which of the following best describes the intertropical convergence zone?
A. The zone where the Harmattan meets the north-easterly trade winds over Africa.
B. The zone where cold fronts form in the tropics.
C. The zone where the west winds meet the subtropical high pressure belt.
D. The zone where the trade winds of the northern hemisphere meet those of the southern
hemisphere.
866) Which wind systems converge on the ITCZ, when it lies at the equator?
A. NW monsoon and SW trade winds
B. SE trade winds and NE trade winds
C. SW monsoon and NW monsoon
D. SW monsoon and NW trade winds
867) The intertropical convergence zone (ITCZ) particularly affects
A. the Atlantic ocean, between latitudes 10°N and 30°N, depending on the time of year.
B. western Africa, where it is situated between the 10°N and 30°N parallels, depending on the
time of the year.
C. western Africa between 10° and 20°N and the northern coasts of the Arabian sea in July.
D. western Africa, at a latitude of 25°N in July.
868) Where, during a flight from Marseille to Dakar, in July, may the ITCZ be encountered?
A. Near the Canary Islands
B. At the latitudes of Gibraltar
C. At the latitudes of Algeria
D. In the vicinity of Dakar
113

Tropical Revolving Storms

869) During which seasons are hurricanes most likely to appear in the northern hemisphere?
A. All seasons.
B. Summer and autumn.
C. Winter.
D. Winter and spring.
870) The initial phase of a thunderstorm is characterized by
A. continuous up draughts
B. continuous downdraughts
C. frequent lightning
D. rain starting at surface
871) What is a microburst?
A. A small low pressure system where the wind circulates with very high speeds.
B. A concentrated downdraft with high speeds and a lower temperature than the surrounding air.
C. A concentrated downdraft with high speeds and a higher temperature than the surrounding air.
D. An extremely strong wind gust in a tropical revolving storm.
872) Why do tropical revolving storms tend to develop mostly in the western parts of the tropical
oceans?
A. Because there is a maximal temperature difference between land mass and sea
B. Because the gulf formation of the coastlines triggers a strong rotary circulation
C. Because there is a maximum of humidity as a result of the trade winds ‘long sea passage
D. Because they are areas in which there is a strong progressive winds hear with increase of
height
873) What is the main energy source of a tropical revolving storm?
A. Cold air advancing from temperate latitudes.
B. The equatorial jet stream.
C. Latent heat released from condensing water vapour.
D. Temperature difference between equatorial low pressure trough and subtropical high pressure
belt.
874) Tropical revolving storms do not occur in the southeast Pacific and the south Atlantic because
A. of the low water temperature.
B. there is no Coriolis force present.
C. of the strong southeast wind.
D. the southeast trade winds cross over into the northern hemisphere.

875. Wind speed in a tropical severe cyclone is:


a. 27 -33 kt
b. 48 - 63 kt
c. 17-27 kt
114

876. Fronts are characteristic of:


a. Tropical cyclone
b. Extra-tropical depressions
c. Monsoon depressions

877. During re-curvature maximum weather in a monsoon depression occurs in


a. SE sector
b. NW sector
c. SW sector
d. NE sector

878. On whatever compass course the cyclone is approached, strong winds from the port indicate that
the centre lies somewhere
a. Ahead
b. Behind
c. Port
d. Starboard

879. The well developed extra tropical cyclonic storm is composed of two main frontal systems and
an occluded front, which varies in extent:
a. A stationary Front followed by a warm front
b. A low with a warm front radiating out Southwards followed by a cold front.
c. A warm front and an occluded front
d. None of the above

880. The weather expected in a well developed cyclonic storm is:


a. Moderate Weather
b. Stormy weather
c. Clear skies
d. No wind or temperature change

881. Cyclone always approach land areas before they die


a. True
b. False

882. The……….. is the most dangerous part of the cyclone is


a. eye wall
b. eye
115

883. No CS form
a. At Poles
b. At Equator
c. At Lat 40 deg

884. Life cycle of a tropical cyclone in India is


a. 2-3 Days
b. 10 Days
c. 6-7 Days

885. CS in Indian region are less intense because


a. They have a very short travel over the sea
b. Sea surface temp, are not high
c. India is close to Equator

886. CS in India are mostly of intensity


a. Severe
b. Very Weak
c. Moderate

887. Eye of a CS is surrounded by


a. Shelf Clouds
b. Wall Clouds
c. Rotor Clouds

888. Surge is sudden strengthening of wind in the ...air mass


a. Same
b. Different
c. Both
116

Indian Climatology

889) What weather conditions are indications of the summer monsoon in India?
A. Fog.
B. Thunderstorms, showers of heavy rain.
C. Stratus clouds and drizzle.
D. Sandstorms.
890) When are the rainy seasons in equatorial Africa?
A. March to May and October to November.
B. December to February and July to October.
C. March to May and August to October.
D. April to July and December to February.
891) What surface weather is associated with a stationary high-pressure region over land in the
winter?
A. NS with continuous rain.
B. The possibility of snow showers.
C. A tendency for fog and low ST.
D. Thunderstorms.
892) In which month does the humid monsoon in India start?
A. In October.
B. In December.
C. In March.
D. In June.
893) Along the West coast of India the prevailing winds are the
A. SW monsoon in July and a NE monsoon in January
B. SW monsoon in July and a SE monsoon in January
C. NE monsoon in July and a SW monsoon in January
D. SE monsoon in July and a SW monsoon in January
894) The transition from SW to NE monsoon in India occurs in
A. July, August, September
B. December, January, February
C. February, March, April
D. September, October, November

895. During winters


a. Advection fog occurs over northern & central part of India
b. Radiation fog occurs in southern part of country
c. Activity of Radiation fog increases after the passage of a WD over N India
117

896. Low Temperatures and low humidity is the characteristic of


a. Post Monsoon
b. Hot weather
c. Monsoon
d. Winter months

897. Hot weather period is


a. Jan-Feb
b. Mar-May
c. Jun-Sept
d. Oct - Dec

898. During hot weather


a. WDs cause TS / DS over Punjab & Rajasthan
b. No WD affect N-parts of country
c. Track of WD is southern most

899. The monsoon current over the West coast of India is


a. SWly
b. SEly
c. NEly

900. Monsoon period is


a. Jan to Feb
b. March to May
c. June to Sep
d. Oct to Dec

901. Rainfall occurs all over the country during monsoon when
a. Axis of MT is in its normal position along Gangetic plains
b. Axis of MT is along Himalayas
c. Depression has formed o-er Bay of Bengal

902. Break in monsoon occurs when


a. Axis of monsoon trough is along Gangetic plains
b. Axis of monsoon trough is along foot hills of Himalayas
c. Depression over Bay of Bengal
118

903. With a depression over the head Bay fair weather during monsoon occurs over
a. Assam
b. W Bengal
c. Orissa

904. Monsoon is also called


a. NE monsoon
b. SW monsoon
c. SE monsoon

905. Post monsoon weather period re


a. Mar to May
b. Jun to Sept
c. Oct to Nov
d. Jan to Feb

906. During post monsoon, pressure gradient over India is


a. weak
b. steep
c. same as winters

907. During monsoon period, low pressure lies over


a. Bay of Bengal
b. NE India
c. Central India
d. Pakistan

908. During vigorous monsoon period the pressure gradient over west coast is
a. Weak
b. Steep
c. Normal

909. An aircraft flying in Monsoon season from Chennai to Kolkata at 14 km will experience winds
a. Easterly
b. Westerly
c. Nly
d. Southerly
119

910. An aircraft flying in Winter season from Chennai to Kolkata at 12 km will experience winds
a. Ely
b. Wly
c. Nly
d. Sly

911. An aircraft flying in Pre monsoon season from Delhi to Kolkata at 10 km will experience winds
a. Easterly
b. Westerly
c. Northerly
d. Southerly

912. An aircraft flying in Monsoon season from Mumbai to Ahmedabad at 03 km will experience
winds
a. SEly
b. SWIy
c. Nly
d. NWly

913. An aircraft flying in winter season from Delhi to Kolkata at 06 km will experience winds
a. SEly
b. SWIy
c. Nly
d. NW - Wly

914. An aircraft flying in winter season from Delhi to Kolkata at 06 km will experience
a. Port drift
b. Starboard drift
c. Tail wind
d. Head win

915. An aircraft flying in winter season from Kolkata to Nagpur at 02 km will experience
a. Port drift
b. Starboard drift
c. Tail wind
d. Head wind
120

916. Mid tropospheric cyclone during monsoon form over


a. Orissa
b. Punjab
c. Gujarat
d. Chennai

917. Maximum cyclones occur over India in


a. Pre monsoon
b. Winters
c. Post monsoon
d. SW monsoon

918. Tropical Jet stream occurs in India during


a. Pre monsoon
b. Winters
c. Post monsoon
d. SW monsoon

919. Pressure gradient over West Coast of India is steep during


a. Pre monsoon
b. Winters
c. Post monsoon
d. SW monsoon
121

MET Reports

920) Refer to the following TAF for Zurich. LSZH 061019 20018G30KT 9999 -RA SCT050
BKN080 TEMPO 23012KT 6000 -DZ BKN015 BKN030 BECMG 1518 23020G35KT 4000 RA
OVC010= The lowest cloud base forecast at ETA Zurich (1200 UTC) is:
A. 1000 FT.
B. 1500 m.
C. 5000 FT.
D. 1500 FT.
921) For an aircraft what are the meteorological dangers associated with a Harmattan wind?
A. Dust and poor visibility.
B. Thunderstorms.
C. Sand up to FL 150.
D. Hail.
922) Refer to the TAF for Bordeaux airport. FCFR31 281400 LFBD 1524 26015KT 9999 SHRA
BKN020 TEMPO 1620 26020G30KT 8000 +SHRA BKN015CB PROB30 TSRA = Flight Lisbon to
Bordeaux, ETA 1800 UTC. At ETA Bordeaux what is the lowest quoted visibility forecast?
A. 10 or more km
B. 8 km
C. 8 NM
D. 10 NM
923) A SPECI is
A. an aviation routine weather report
B. a warning for special weather phenomena
C. a forecast for special weather phenomena
D. an aviation selected special weather report
924) Which of the following phenomena should be described as precipitation at the time they are
observed?
A. SA
B. TS
C. SQ
D. DZ
925) What is a trend forecast?
A. An aerodrome forecast valid for 9 hours
B. A route forecast valid for 24 hours
C. A routine report
D. A landing forecast appended to METAR/SPECI, valid for 2 hours
926) Which of the following weather reports is a warning of conditions that could be potentially
hazardous to aircraft in flight ?
A. SIGMET.
B. ATIS.
122

C. SPECI.
D. TAF.

927) Which of the following weather reports could be, in accordance with the regulations, abbreviated
to "CAVOK"?
A. 26012KT 8000 SHRA BKN025 16/12 Q1018 NOSIG =
B. 27019G37KT 9999 BKN050 18/14 Q1016 NOSIG =
C. 34004KT 7000 MIFG SCT260 09/08 Q1029 BECMG 1600 =
D. 00000KT 0100 FG VV001 11/11 Q1025 BECMG 0500 =
928) In Zurich during a summer day the following weather observations were taken: 160450Z
23015KT 3000 +RA SCT008 SCT020 OVC030 13/12 Q1010 NOSIG = 160650Z 25008KT 6000
SCT040 BKN090 18/14 Q1010 RERA NOSIG = 160850Z 25006KT 8000 SCT040 SCT100 19/15
Q1009 NOSIG = 161050Z 24008KT 9999 SCT040 SCT100 21/15 Q1008 NOSIG = 161250Z
23012KT CAVOK 23/16 Q1005 NOSIG = 161450Z 23016KT 9999 SCT040 BKN090 24/17 Q1003
BECMG 25020G40KT TS = 161650Z 24018G35KT 3000 +TSRA SCT006 BKN015CB 18/16
Q1002 NOSIG = 161850Z 28012KT 9999 SCT030 SCT100 13/11 Q1005 NOSIG = What do you
conclude based on these observations?
A. A cold front passed the station early in the morning and a warm front during late afternoon
B. A trough line passed the station early in the morning and a warm front during late afternoon
C. Storm clouds due to warm air came close to and grazed the station
D. A warm front passed the station early in the morning and a cold front during late afternoon
929) Refer to the following TAF extract: BECMG 1821 2000 BKN004 PROB30 BECMG 2124 0500
FG VV001 What visibility is forecast for 2400 UTC?
A. 500 m.
B. 2000 m.
C. Between 500 m and 2000 m.
D. Between 0 m and 1000 m.
930) Refer to the following TAF extract; BECMG 1821 2000 BKN004 PROB30 BECMG 2124 0500
FG VV001 What does the abbreviation "PROB30" mean?
A. Change expected in less than 30 minutes.
B. Probability of 30%.
C. Conditions will last for at least 30 minutes.
D. The cloud ceiling should lift to 3000 FT.
931) Refer to the TAF for Amsterdam airport. FCNL31 281500 EHAM 281601 14010KT 6000 -RA
SCT025 BECMG 1618 12015G25KT SCT008 BKN013 TEMPO 1823 3000 RA BKN005 OVC010
BECMG 2301 25020KT 8000 NSW BKN020 = Flight from Bordeaux to Amsterdam, ETA 2100
UTC. At ETA Amsterdam what surface wind is forecast ?
A. 120° / 15 kt gusts 25 kt
B. 140° / 10 kt
C. 300° / 15 kt maximum wind 25 kt
D. 250° / 20 kt
123

932) What does the term TREND signify?


A. It is a flight forecast, issued by the meteorological station several times daily
B. It is a brief landing forecast added to the actual weather report
C. It is the actual weather report at an aerodrome and is generally issued at half-hourly intervals
D. It is a warning of dangerous meteorological conditions
933) Refer to the following TAF for Zurich. LSZH 261019 20018G30KT 9999 -RA SCT050
BKN080 TEMPO 23012KT 6000 -DZ BKN015 BKN030 BECMG 1518 23020G35KT 4000 RA
OVC010= The lowest visibility forecast at ETA Zurich 1430 UTC is:
A. 6 km.
B. 6 NM.
C. 4 km.
D. 10 km.
934) What does the abbreviation "nosig" mean?
A. Not signed by the meteorologist
B. No significant changes
C. No report received
D. No weather related problems
935) Refer to the TAF for Zurich Airport TAF LSZH 250716 00000KT 0100 FG VV001 BECMG
0810 0800 VV002 BECMG 1012 23005KT 2500 BKN005 TEMPO 1316 6000 SCT007 = Which of
these statements best describes the weather that can be expected at 1200 UTC?
A. Meteorological visibility 6 kilometres, cloud base 500 feet, windspeed 5 knots
B. Meteorological visibility 2,5 kilometres, cloud base 500 feet, windspeed 5 knots
C. Meteorological visibility 800 metres, wind from 230°, cloud base 500 feet
D. Meteorological visibility 800 metres, vertical visibility 200 feet, calm
936) In METAR messages, the pressure group represents the
A. QFE rounded to the nearest hPa.
B. QNH rounded up to the nearest hPa.
C. QFE rounded down to the nearest hPa.
D. QNH rounded down to the nearest hPa.
937) What does the term SIGMET signify?
A. A SIGMET is a brief landing forecast added to the actual weather report
B. A SIGMET is an actual weather report at an aerodrome and is generally issued at half-hourly
intervals
C. A SIGMET is a warning of dangerous meteorological conditions
D. A SIGMET is a flight forecast, issued by the meteorological station several times daily
938) When will the surface wind in a METAR record a gust factor ?
A. With gusts of at least 25 knots
B. With gusts of at least 35 knots
C. When gusts are at least 10 knots above the mean wind speed
D. When gusts are at least 15 knots above the mean wind speed
124

939) In which weather report would you expect to find information about icing conditions on the
runway?
A. GAFOR
B. TAF
C. METAR
D. SIGMET
940) Does the following report make sense? LSZH VRB02KT 5000 MIFG 02/02 Q1015 NOSIG
A. The report would never be seen, because shallow fog is not reported when the meteorological
visibility is more than 2 km.
B. The report is nonsense, because it is impossible to observe a meteorological visibility of 5 km
if shallow fog is reported.
C. The report is not possible, because, with a temperature of 2°C and a dew point of 2°C there
must be uniform fog.
D. The report is possible, because shallow fog is defined as a thin layer of fog below eye level.
941) In which of the following circumstances is a SIGMET issued ?
A. Marked mountain waves.
B. Fog or a thunderstorm at an aerodrome.
C. Clear ice on the runways of an aerodrome.
D. A sudden change in the weather conditions contained in the METAR.
942) What values are used for the forecasted wind at higher levels?
A. Direction relative to magnetic north and speed in kmh
B. Direction relative to grid north and speed in kmh
C. Direction relative to true north and speed in knots
D. Direction relative to magnetic north and speed in knots
943) In which of the following METAR reports, is the probability of fog formation in the coming
night the highest?
A. 1850Z 21003KT 8000 SCT250 12/m08 Q1028 NOSIG =
B. 1850Z 06018G30KT 5000 OVC010 04/01 Q1024 NOSIG =
C. 1850Z 25010KT 4000 RA BKN012 OVC030 12/10 Q1006 TEMPO 1500 =
D. 1850Z 15003KT 6000 SCT120 05/04 Q1032 BECMG 1600 =
944) Refer to the TAF for Zurich Airport TAF LSZH 250716 00000KT 0100 FG VV001 BECMG
0810 0800 VV002 BECMG 1012 23005KT 2500 BKN005 TEMPO 1316 6000 SCT007 = Which of
these statements best describes the weather that can be expected at 1200 UTC?
A. Meteorological visibility 6 kilometres, cloud base 500 feet, windspeed 5 knots
B. Meteorological visibility 2,5 kilometres, cloud base 500 feet, windspeed 5 knots
C. Meteorological visibility 800 metres, wind from 230°, cloud base 500 feet
D. Meteorological visibility 800 metres, vertical visibility 200 feet, calm
945) Which of the following statements is an interpretation of the SIGMET ? LSAW
SWITZERLAND 0307 SIGMET 2 VALID 030700/031100 LSSW mod to sev cat fcst north of alps
btn fl 260 and fl 380 / stnr / intsf =
A. Severe turbulence observed below FL 260 north of the Alps. Pilots advised to cross this area
above FL 380
B. Moderate to strong clear air turbulence of constant intensity to be expected north of the Alps
125

C. Moderate to severe clear air turbulence to be expected north of the Alps. Intensity increasing.
Danger zone between FL 260 and FL 380
D. Zone of moderate to severe turbulence moving towards the area north of the Alps. Intensity
increasing. Pilots advised to cross this area above FL 260
946) What does the term METAR signify?
A. A METAR is a flight forecast, issued by the meteorological station several times daily.
B. A METAR is a landing forecast added to the actual weather report as a brief prognostic
report.
C. A METAR signifies the actual weather report at an aerodrome and is generally issued in half-
hourly intervals.
D. A METAR is a warning of dangerous meteorological conditions within a FIR.
947) What is the wind speed given in a METAR report based on?
A. The average speed of the previous 30 minutes
B. The strongest gust in the previous hour
C. The actual speed at the time of recording
D. The average speed of the previous 10 minutes
948) SIGMET information is issued as a warning for significant weather to
A. VFR operations only
B. heavy aircraft only
C. all aircraft
D. light aircraft only
949) A pilot is warned of severe icing at certain flight levels by information supplied in
A. SWC and SIGMET
B. TAF and METAR
C. METAR and SIGMET
D. TAF and SIGMET
950) Which of the four answers is a correct interpretation of data from the following METAR ?
16003KT 0400 R14/P1500 R16/1000N FZFG VV003 M02/M02 Q1026 BECMG 2000 =
A. Meteorological visibility 400 m, RVR for runway 16 1000 m, dew point -2°C, freezing fog.
B. RVR for runway 16 1000 m, meteorological visibility increasing in the next 2 hours to 2000
m, vertical visibility 300 m, temperature -2°C.
C. RVR for runway 14 1500 m, meteorological visibility 400 m, QNH 1026 hPa, wind 160° at 3
kt.
D. Meteorological visibility 1000 m, RVR 400 m, freezing level at 300 m, variable winds,
temperature 2°C.
951) You receive the following METAR : LSGG 0750Z 00000KT 0300 R05/0700N FG VV001
M02/M02 Q1014 NOSIG = What will be the RVR at 0900 UTC?
A. 900 m.
B. The RVR is unknown, because the "NOSIG" does not refer to RVR.
C. 300 m.
D. 700 m.
126

952) Appended to a METAR you get the following runway report: 01650428 What must you consider
when making performance calculations?
A. The braking action will be medium to good.
B. The runway will be wet.
C. Aquaplaning conditions.
D. The friction coefficient is 0.28.
953) Which of the following weather reports could be, in accordance with the regulations, abbreviated
to "CAVOK"?
A. 04012G26KT 9999 BKN030 11/07 Q1024 NOSIG =
B. 15003KT 9999 BKN100 17/11 Q1024 NOSIG =
C. 24009KT 6000 RA SCT010 OVC030 12/11 Q1007 TEMPO 4000 =
D. 29010KT 9999 SCT045TCU 16/12 Q1015 RESHRA NOSIG =
954) The wind direction in a METAR is measured relative to
A. magnetic north
B. the 0-meridian
C. grid north
D. true north
955) Which of these four METAR reports suggests that a thunderstorm is likely in the next few hours?
A 1350Z
A. 16004KT 8000 SCT110 OVC220 02/m02 Q1008 NOSIG =
B. 1350Z 34003KT 0800 SN VV002 m02/m04 Q1014 NOSIG =
C. 1350Z 04012KT 3000 OVC012 04/03 Q1022 BECMG 5000 =
D. 1350Z 21005KT 9999 SCT040CB SCT100 26/18 Q1016 TEMPO 24018G30 TS =
956) With what type of cloud is "+TSRA" precipitation most commonly associated?
A. NS
B. CB
C. AS
D. SC
957) Which of the following meteorological phenomena can rapidly change the braking action of a
runway?
1. HZ
2. +FZRA
3. MIFG
4. FG
958) With what type of cloud is "GR" precipitation most commonly associated?
A. AS
B. ST
C. CC
D. CB
959) The validity of a TAF is
A. 2 hours
B. between 6 and 9 hours
127

C. 9 hours from the time of issue


D. stated in the TAF
960) Given the following METAR: EDDM 250850Z 33005KT 2000 R26R/P1500N R26L/1500N BR
SCT002 OVC003 05/05 Q1025 NOSIG
A. Runway 26R and runway 26L have the same RVR
B. RVR on runway 26R is increasing
C. Visibility is reduced by water droplets
D. There is a distinct change in RVR observed
961) What is a SPECI?
A. A warning of meteorological dangers at an aerodrome, issued only when required.
B. An aerodrome forecast issued every 9 hours.
C. A selected special aerodrome weather report, issued when a significant change of the weather
conditions have been observed.
D. A routine aerodrome weather report issued every 3 hours.
962) How is the direction and speed of upper winds described in forecasts ?
A. The direction is relative to magnetic north and the speed is in knots.
B. The direction is relative to magnetic north and the speed is in miles per hour.
C. The direction is relative to true north and the speed is in miles per hour.
D. The direction is relative to true north and the speed is in knots.
963) In which of the following 1850 UTC METAR reports, is the probability of fog formation, in the
coming night, the highest?
A. 00000KT 9999 SCT300 21/01 Q1032 NOSIG =
B. VRB01KT 8000 SCT250 11/10 Q1028 BECMG 3000 =
C. 22004KT 6000 -RA SCT012 OVC030 17/14 Q1009 NOSIG =
D. VRB02KT 2500 SCT120 14/M08 Q1035 NOSIG =
964) The upper wind and temperature chart of 250 hPa corresponds, in a standard atmosphere, to about
A. 32 000 FT
B. 34 000 FT
C. 39 000 FT
D. 30 000 FT
965) How long from the time of observation is a TREND in a METAR valid?
A. 1 hour.
B. 30 minutes.
C. 2 hours.
D. 9 hours.
966) Refer to the following TAF extract: BECMG 1821 2000 BKN004 PROB30 BECMG 2124 0500
FG VV001 What does the abbreviation "BKN004" mean?
A. 4 - 8 oktas, ceiling 400 m.
B. 1 - 4 oktas, ceiling 400 m.
C. 5 - 7 oktas, ceiling 400 FT.
D. 1 - 4 oktas, ceiling 400 FT.
128

967. How is the direction and speed of upper winds described in forecasts ?
A. The direction is relative to magnetic north and the speed is in knots.
B. The direction is relative to magnetic north and the speed is in miles per hour.
C. The direction is relative to true north and the speed is in miles per hour.
D. The direction is relative to true north and the speed is in knots.
968) In which of the following 1850 UTC METAR reports, is the probability of fog formation, in the
coming night, the highest?
A. 00000KT 9999 SCT300 21/01 Q1032 NOSIG =
B. VRB01KT 8000 SCT250 11/10 Q1028 BECMG 3000 =
C. 22004KT 6000 -RA SCT012 OVC030 17/14 Q1009 NOSIG =
D. VRB02KT 2500 SCT120 14/M08 Q1035 NOSIG =
969) The upper wind and temperature chart of 250 hPa corresponds, in a standard atmosphere, to about
A. 32 000 FT
B. 34 000 FT
C. 39 000 FT
D. 30 000 FT
970) Refer to the following TAF extract: BECMG 1821 2000 BKN004 PROB30 BECMG 2124 0500
FG VV001 What does the abbreviation "BKN004" mean?
A. 4 - 8 oktas, ceiling 400 m.
B. 1 - 4 oktas, ceiling 400 m.
C. 5 - 7 oktas, ceiling 400 FT.
D. 1 - 4 oktas, ceiling 400 FT.
971. How long from the time of observation is a TREND in a METAR valid?
A. 1 hour.
B. 30 minutes.
C. 2 hours.
D. 9 hours.

972. For non-scheduled National Flights an advance notice (before ETD) is required to be given to
Class I Met Offices
a. 3 hr
b. 18-24 hr
c. 6 hr

973. For non-scheduled National Flights advance notice an advance notice (before ETD) is required to
be given to Class III Met Offices
a. 3 hr
b. 18-24 hr
c. 6 hr
129

974. World Area Forecast System provides high quality en-route forecasts of to Met Offices
a. Met Offices
b. en-route forests of winds and temperature
c. SIGMET
d. TREND

975. Local Forecast covers an area


a. 50 NM
b. 100 NM
c. 150 NM

976. Prognostic Charts are issued by


a. RAFC
b. Class I Met Offices
c. MWO

977. Prognostic Charts are valid for


a. 18 hr
b. 12 hr
c. 9hr

978. S1G Wx Chart are issued for Flight Levels


a. below 460
b. 460
c. above 460

979. CODAR is
a. Radar Report
b. Upper report from an aircraft (other than weather reconnaissance aircraft)
c. Coded ARFOR

980. WINTEM is
a. Actual upper winds
b. Forecast upper wind and temperature
c. Actual temperature and upper winds
130

981. SIGMET is a notice of severe weather for


a. actual
b. expected
c. both

982. SIGMET is issued for aircraft


a. in flight
b. on ground
c. both

983. SIGMET is issued by


a. RAFC
b. Class I Met Offices
c. MWO

984. SIGMET is valid for


a. 4 hr
b. 18 hr
c. 6 hr

985. SIGMET is not issued for


a. Rain
b. Volcanic Ash
c. SEV Icing

986. AIRMET is issued by a MWO for the occurrence or expected occurrence of en-route weather
phenomena, which may affect the safety of
a. low-level aircraft
b. high -level aircraft
c. both

987. GAMET is an area forecast in abbreviated plain language for


a. high -level aircraft
b. low-level aircraft
c. both
131

988. The validity of Airfield warnings is not exceeding


a. 3 hr
b. 4 hr
c. 6 hr

989. Airfield warning is issued for expected wind speed


a. 30 kt
b. 24 kt
c. 15 kt

990. Airfield warning is issued for wind direction of 20 kt changes by


a. 45°
b. 30°
c. 60°

991. In ROBEX the messages exchanged are METAR/SPECI of international aerodromes and their
alternates
a. within India
b. outside India

992. SIG Weather Charts are issued .... times a day


a. Two
b. Three
c. Four

993. The METAR has been issued on day

a. 15'"

b. 16th

c. 17th

994. The METAR has been issued at

a. 0630 1ST

b. 0230UTC

c. 0230 1ST
132

995. The surface wind speed is

a. 2- 6 kt

b. 3-7 kt

c. 4-6 kt

996. Wind direction is varying from

a. 290 to 050°

b. 050 to 290°

c. 200 to 050°

997. Present weather is

a. Fog

b. Brown Dust

c. Mist

998. Amount of lowest cloud is

a. 1-2/8

b. 2-4/8

c. 5-7/8

990. Amount of CB cloud is

a. 1-2/8

b. 2-4/8

c. 5-7/8

991. Height of base of CB is

a. 2500 m

b. 3000 ft

c. 2500 ft

992. The height of topmost layer of cloud is

a. 3000 m
133

b. 30000 m

c. 30000 ft

993. The landing forecast appended to METAR is valid for

a. 1 hr

b. 2hr

c. 3 hr

994. The wind in TREND from o330 UTC is valid up to ... UTC

a. 0400

b. 0430

c. 0415

995. Expected visibility after 0415 UTC is

a. 6000 m

b. 10 km

c. >10 km

996. Q1003 is

a. QFE

b. QFF

c. QNH

997. The difference between TT and TdTd is 5° C. The atmosphere is

a. Very Dry

b. Moist

c. Saturated

998. Just before the METAR was issued the weather was

a. Rain

b. Mist

c. Fog
134

999. The range of pressure reported as Q1003 is

a. 1002.5 to 1003.5 hPa

b. 1003.0 to 1003.9 hPa

c. 1003.1 to 1003.5 hPa

1000. The range of temperature reported as 32 is

a. 31.5 to 32.4 ° C

b. 32.1 to 32.4 ° C

c. 31.5 to 32.4 ° C

1001. Visibility is reported in steps of 50 m when visibility is

a. 800 m to 5000 m

b. 0 to 800 m

c. 5000 m to 10 km

1002. Visibility is reported in steps of 100 m when visibility is

a. 800 m to 5000 m

b. 0 to 800 m

c. 5000 m to 10 km

1003. Visibility is reported in steps of 1000 m when visibility is

a. 800 m to 5000 m

b. 0 to 800 m

c. 5000 m to 9999

1004. Visibility is reported 9999 when visibility is

a. 800 m to 5000 m

b. 9000 to 9999 m

c. 10 km or more

1005. Temperature + 2.5°C reported as

a. 2°C
135

b. 3°C

c. 2.5°C

1006. QNH 1002.6 hPa is reported as

a. Q1002

b. Q1003

c. Q1002.6

1007. QNH 29-92 inches is reported as

a. Q2900

b. A2992

c. A 3000

1008. Fog is reported when visibility is

a. < 1000 m

b. 1000 m

c. > 1000 m

1009. Mist is reported when visibility is

a. < 1000 m to 2000m

b. 1000 to 5000m

c. >1000 m

1010. CAVOK signifies Visibility, Cloud and present weather better than the prescribed
values or conditions

a. Ceiling

b. base

c. amount

1011. CAVOK is issued when visibility is

a. 9-10 km

b. 10 km or more
136

c. 10 km only

1012. CAVOK is issued when (i) Visibility 10 km or more (ii) No weather of significance (iii)No
clouds below 1500 m or below the highest minimum sector altitude, which ever is greater and no
cumulonimbus.

a. Any one condition

b. Any two conditions

c. All the three conditions

1013. SPECI is issued when (i) Change in wind direction by > 60° and speed before and/ after
change is > 10 kt. (ii) Mean speed has changed by > 10 kt (iii) Variation from mean speed by >
10 kt and speed before and/ after change > 15 kt

a. Any two conditions

b. Any one condition

c. Any one condition

1014. SPECI is issued when Clouds are (i) BKN or OVC base at 30, 60, 150, 300, 450 m (ii) Cloud
amount below 450 m changes: From SKC/ FEW/ SCT to BKN / OVC From BKN/ OVC
to SKC/ FEW/ SCT.

a. Any one condition

b. Any two conditions

c. All the three conditions

1015) What weather is prevalent in the zone of easterly waves?


A. Frontal weather.
B. Thunderstorms and rain.
C. Continuous rain.
D. Clear skies.

1016) What information is given on a Significant Weather Chart?


A. The significant weather forecast for the time given on the chart
B. The significant weather that is observed at the time given on the chart
C. The significant weather in a period 3 hours before and 3 hours after the time given on the chart
D. The significant weather forecast for a period 6 hours after the time given on the chart

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