Sahil Khurana Met Question
Sahil Khurana Met Question
Sahil Khurana Met Question
2. At a certain position, the temperature on the 300 hPa chart is -48°c according to the
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
a. -55°C
b. -35°C
C. -25°C
d.-75°C
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
7. The 0°C isotherm is forecast to be at FL 50. At what FL would you expect a Temperature of -6°C?
a. FL80
B. FL 20
c. FL 100
d. FL 110
8. How does temperature vary with increasing altitude in the ICAO standard atmosphere below the
Tropopause?
a. Increases
c. Remains constant
d. Decreases
10. What is the boundary layer between troposphere and stratosphere called?
a.Tropopause.
b.lonosphere.
c Stratosphere.
d.Atmosphere
11. How would you characterise an air temperature of -15°C at the 700 hPa level over Mumbai?
a.Low
b.High
12. 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.-03°c
d.+7°C
13. How does the height of the tropopause normally vary with latitude in the northern
hemisphere?
14. 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
a. -273°c
b. -44.7°C
C. -100°C
d. -56.5°C
b. High
c.low
d. Very high
18. The height and the temperature of the tropopause are respectively in the order of
19. 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
20. What is the vertical temperature lapse rate, up to 11 km, in the ICAO standard atmosphere?
21. 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?
22. How would you characterise an air temperature of -30°C at the 300 hPa level?
c. very low
d. High
23. The rate of decrease of temperature with helght per 100 m in the International Standard
Atmosphere is:
a. 0.65°C
b. 1C
c. 0.5°C
d. variable
24. What is the approximate composition of the dry air by volume in the troposphere?
25. 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
26. A temperature of +15°C is recorded at an altitude of 500 metres above sea level. If the vertical
temperature gradient is that of a standard atmosphere, what will the temperature be at the summit of a
mountain, 2500 metres above sea level?
a.+4°C
b. 0°C
c. -2°C
D. +2°C
27. The temperature at FL 140 is -12°C. What will the temperature be at FL 110 if the ICAO standard
lapse rate is applied?
a. -15°C.
b. -6°C
C. -18°C.
d. -9’C
28.if you are flying at FL120 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
b. has a greater vertical extent above the equator than above the poles
b. the wind
c. latitude
d. longitude
31. What, approximately, is the average height of the tropopause over the equator?
a. 16 km
b. 8 km
c. 11 km
d. 40 km
32. Going from the equator to the North Pole, the altitude of the tropopause
a. -20°C
b. -35°C
c.-5°C
d. 0°C
a. 14 km
b. 16 km
c. 11 km
d. 8 km
c. is almost constant
36. Which layer of the atmosphere contains more than 90% of all water vapour?
a. Troposphere
b. Lower stratosphere
c. Upper stratosph
b. 11 to 50 km
c. to 11 km
d. 50 to 85 km
38. The 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
39. Which constant pressure altitude chart is standard for 18,289 FT pressure level (FL180)?
a. 300 hPa
b. 200 hPa
C 700 hPa
d.500 hPa
40. 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
41. Which constant pressure altitude chart is standard for a 38,662 FT pressure level (FL 390)?
a. 500 hPa
b.700 hPa
c.200 hPa
d. 300 hPa
a. QNE
b. QFF
c. QFE
d. QNH
a. 8 km
b. 6 km
C. 3 km
d. 11 km
44. 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. FL180
45. 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
46. The QNH at an airfield located 200 metres above sea level is 1022 hPa. The air temperature is not
available. What is the QFF?
C 1022 hPa
47. 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. FL100
48. 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
49. 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?
51. 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
52. What positions are connected by isobars on the surface weather chart?
53.How would you characterise an air temperature of -30°C at the 300 hPa level over Western Europe?
b. Low
c.Very low
d.High
54. The QFF at an airfield in California located 69 meters below sea level is 1030 hPa. The air
temperature is 10°C lower than a standard atmosphere. What is the QNH?
a.1030 hPa
a. 8 m (27 FT)
b. 32 m (105 FT)
b. further the isobars will be apart and the higher the temperature
d. further the isobars will be apart and the weaker the wind
57. When planning a flight at FL 110, which upper wind and temperature chart would be nearest your
flight level?
a. 700 hPa
b. 850 hPa
c. 300 hPa
d. 500 hPa
58. The QNH at an airfield in California located 69 meters below sea level is 1018 hPa. The air
temperature is 10°C higher than a standard atmosphere. What is the QFF?
a. 1018 hPa
59. The QNH at an airfield located 0 meters above sea level is 1022 hPa. The air temperature is not
available. What is the QFF?
b.1022 hPa
60. In what hPa range is an upper weather chart for FL 340 situated?
a. 400 – 300 hPa
61. 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
62. In the troposphere the decrease of pressure per 100 m Increase in height
63. The QFF at an airfield located 400 meters above sea level is 1016 hPa. The air temperature is a lower
than a standard atmosphere. What is the QNH?
b. 1016 hPa
a. QFF
b. QFE
C. QNE
d. QNH
65. A 200 hPa pressure altitude level can vary in height. In temperate region which of the following
average heights is applicable?
a. FL 100.
b, FL 50.
c. FL 390.
d. FL 300.
66. If you are planning a flight at FL 290, which of these upper wind and temperature charts would be
a. 850 hPa
b.300 hPa
C. 500 hPa
d. 700 hPa
67. A 300 hPa pressure level can vary in height. In temperate regions which of the following average
heights is applicable?
a FL 100
b. FL50
c.FL 300
d. FL 390
68. 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?
d. 1009 hPa
69. Which constant pressure altitude chart is standard for a 30,065 FT pressure level (FL 300)?
A 200 hPa
b. 700 hPa
c. 500 hPa
d, 300 hPa
70. Which constant pressure altitude chart is standard for a 9,882 FT pressure level (FL 100)?
a. 700hPa
b. 850 hPa
C. 500 hPa
d. 300 hPa
71. The isobars drawn on a surface weather chart represent lines of equal pressure
a. at flight level
b. at height of observatory
72. If the pressure surfaces bulge upwards in all levels then the pressure system is a
a. cold low
b. cold high
c. warm low
d. warm high
73. When isobars, for an area in the mid-latitudes on a weather map, are close together, the wind is
most likely to be
b. light
c. strong
75. The isobars drawn on a surface weather chart represent lines of equal pressure
a. at flight level
b. at height of observatory
76. Areas of sinking air are generally cloudless because as air sinks it
d. is heated by expansion
77. What type of air movement is associated with the centre line of a trough?
78. 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 alr 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 decent of air in the depression
81. In temperate latitudes what weather conditions may be expected over land during the summer in
the centre of a stationary high pressure zone?
82. What surface weather is associated with a stationary high pressure region over land in the winter?
d. Thunderstorms.
83. What is the correct term for the descending air flow in a large high pressure area?
a. Convection
b. Subsidence
c. Convergence
d. Advection
85. What is the most likely cause of a lack of clouds at higher levels in a stationary high?
b Sinking air
c. Rising air
d. Instability
87. Where are you likely to find the strongest winds close to the ground?
a. Where there is little variation in pressure over a large area during the winter months
90. Consider the following statements relative to Air Density and select the one which is corect:
a. Because air density increases with decrease of temperature, air density must increase with increase of
height in the International Standard Atmosphere (ISA..
b.At any given surface temperature the air density will be greater in anticyclonic conditions than it will
be when the MSL pressure is lower.
d. The effect of change of temperature on the air density is much greater than the effect of change of
atmospheric pressure.
a. over cold air, the pressure is higher at upper levels than at similar levels over warm air
b.over cold air, the pressure is lower at upper levels than at similar levels over warm air
c.over warm air, the pressure is lower at upper levels than at similar levels over warm air
d. the upper level pressure depends solely on the relative humidity below
95. At FL 180, the air temperature is -35°C. The air density at this level is:
96. Under what condition does pressure altitude have the same value as dens
d. At standard temperature.
97. When flying at FL180 in the Southern Hemisphere you experience a left crosswind. What is
happening to your true altitude if indicated altitude is constant?
b. Increasing
c. Decreasing
d. Impossible to tell
98. Which of these would cause your true altitude to decrease with a constant indicated altitude?
99. An aircraft flying in the Alps on a very cold day, RPS 1013 set in the altimeter, flies level with the
summit of the mountains. Altitude from aneroid altimeter reads:
d. Impossible to determine
100. You are flying in an atmosphere which is warmer than ISA, what might you expect?
101. The QNH is 1030 hPa and at the Transition level you set the SPS. What happens to your indicated
altitude(assume 27 ft per 1 hPa)?
a. Drops by 459 ft
b. Rises by 459 ft
c. No change
d. Rises
102. If you are flying on a QNH 1009 on very cold day and you circle the top of a peak in the Alps, your
altimeter will read
103. QFE is 1000 hPa with an airfield elevation of 200 m AMSL. What is QNH? (use 8 m per hPa)
a. 975 HP
b.1025 HP
c.1008 HP
d. 992 HPa
QNH is:
c. Same
106. You are flying in the Alps at the same level as the summits on a hot day. What does the altimeter
read?
d. Impossible to tell
107. An airfield has an elevation of 540ft with a QNH of 993mb. An aircraft descends and lands at the
airfield with 1013mb set. What will its altimeter read on landing?
a. 380ft
b. 1080ft
c. 0ft
d. 540ft
108. What is the relationship between QFE and QNH at an airport 50ft below MSL?
a. QFE - QNH
b. QFE <QNH
d. 0°C
d. There is no clear relationship
109. Up to FL 180 ISA Deviation is ISA +10°C What is the actual depth of the layer between FL 60 and FL
120?
a. 6000 ft
b. 6240 ft
c. 5760 ft
d. 5700 ft
110. Up to FL 180 ISA Deviation is ISA -10°C. What is the actual depth of the layer between FL 60 and FL
120?
a. 6000 ft
b. 6240 ft
c. 5760 ft
d. 5700 ft
111. What condition would cause your indicated altitude to be lower than that being actually flown?
b. Pressure is standard
113. You fly from east to west at the 500 hPa level in the Northern Hemisphere;
d. you fly towards an area of lower pressure, and therefore, experience a loss in altitude.
115. Several physical processes contribute to atmospheric warming. Which of the following contribute
the
most?
116. 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
117. The morning following a clear, calm night when the temperature has dropped to the dew point, is
likely to produce
a. a cold front
b. haze
d. radiation fog
120. 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
122. An inversion is
123. On a clear sky, continental ground surface, wind calm, the minimum temperature is reached
approximately
b. the surface of the earth, which heats the air in the troposphere
c. the air in the troposphere directly
125. Which of the following is a common cause of ground or surface temperature inversion?
b. Warm air being lifted rapidly aloft, in the vicinity of mountainous terrain
c.The movement of colder air under warm air, or the movement of warm air over cold air.
127. What is the technical term for an increase in temperature with altitude?
a. Advection
b. Inversion
c. Subsidence
d. Adiabatic
129. 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
130. In the International Standard Atmosphere the decrease in temperature with height below 11 km is
a. 0.6°C per 100m
132. When a given mass of air descends, what effect will it have on relative humidity?
a. It increases.
b. It remains constant.
d. it decreases
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
135. The maximum amount of water vapour that the air can contain depends on the:
a. air temperature
b. relative humidity
d. dewpoint
136. Which of the following changes of state is known as sublimation?
a. heat is absorbed
b. heat is released
138. Which of the following statement 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
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.
139. The process by which water vapour is transformed directly into ice is known as:
a. Sublimation
b. supercooling
c. supersaturation
d. radiation cooling
140. 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. 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
142. How, if at all, is the relative humidity of an unsaturated air mass influenced by temperature
changes?
a. Increases if the air is cooled whilst maintaining the vapour pressure constant
d. decreases if the air is cooled whilst maintaining the vapour pressure constant
a. Gas to liquid
b. Solid to liquid
c. Solid to gas
d. Liquid to gas
c. Ratio between the actual mixing ratio and the saturation mixing ratio X 100
a. moist air
d. dry air
148. 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
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.
150. The relative humidity of a sample air mass is 50%. How is the relative humidity of this air influenced
by changes of the amount of water vapour in it?
151. How does relative humidity and the dewpoint in an unsaturated air 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.
a. Stratosphere.
b. Stratopause.
c. Troposphere
d. Tropopause.
temperature
b. Absolute stability
c. Absolute instability
d. Conditional stability
a. expands
b. It contracts
157. From which of the following can the stability of the atmosphere be determined?
a. surface pressure
b. surface temperature
C. DALR
d. ELR
158. The rate of cooling of ascending saturated air is less than the rate of cooling of ascending
unsaturated air because:
159. The temperature at the surface is 15°C, the temperature at 1000m is 13°c. is the atmosphere
a. Unstable
b. Conditionally unstable
c. Stable
d. Cannot tell
160. Which of the following gives conditionally unstable conditions when saturated?
a. 1°C/100m
b. 0.65°C/100m
c. 0.49°C/100m
161. A mass of unsaturated air is forced to rise till just under the condensation level. It then settles back
to its original position
d. It depends on QFE
162. What happens to the stability of the atmosphere in an inversion? (Temp increasing with height)
a. Absolutely stable
b. Unstable
c. Conditionally stable
d. Conditionally unstable
163. What happens to stability of the atmosphere in an isothermal layer? (Temp constant with height)
a. Absolutely stable
b. Unstable
c. Conditionally stable
d. Conditionally unstable
a. Good visibility
b. Calm conditions
c. Windshear
d. Unstable conditions
166. What happens to the temperature of a saturated air mass when forced to descend?
d. it heats up less than dry because of latent heat released during condensat
a. DALR
b. SALR
c. ELR
d. ALR
168. What happens to the temperature of a saturated air mass when descending?
d. it heats up less than dry because of late heat released during condensation
b. Fixed
a. Conditionally stable
b. Conditionally unstable
c. Unstable
d. Stable
a. lost
d. added
a. haze
b. drizzle
c. low stratus
173. In an unstable layer there are cumuliform clouds. The vertical extent of these clouds depends on
the
b. wind direction
a. stable
b. unstable
d. conditionally unstable
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
176. When warm air is advected in the lower part of a cold layer of air:
a. Tropopause level
b. 5500m
178. Standing in the Northern Hemisphere, north of a polar frgetal depression travelling west to east,
the wind will
a. Continually veer
b. Continually back
181. When heading South in the Southern Hemisphere you experience Starboard drift
182. The gradient wind is more than geostrophic wind around an anticyclone because the
184. Flying from an area of low pressure in the Southern Hemisphere at low altitudes, where is the wind
coming from?
186. A METAR for Paris gave the surface wind at 260/20. Wind at 2000ft is most likely to be:
a. 260°/15
b. 210°/30
c. 290°/40
d. 175°/15
188. Where would you expect to find the strongest wind on the ground in temperate latitudes?
d. In a weak anticyclone
189. At a coastal airfield, with the runway parallel to the coastline. You are downwind over the sea with
the runway to your right. On a warm summer alfornioon, what would you expect the wind to be on
finals?
b. Headwind
c. Tailwind
a. Difference in pressure
b. Rotation of the earth
c. Frontal systems
d. Difference in temperature
191. If flying in the Alps with a Foehn effect from the south
b. Surface wind blows along the isobars and is less than the 3000ft wind
c. Surface wind blows across the isobars and is less than the 3000ft wind
193. The Geostrophic Wind blows at your flight level in Northern Hemisphere the true altitude and
indicated altitude remain constant, is the crosswind
c. No crosswind
d. Impossible to determine
194. With all other things being equal with a high and a low having constantly spaced circular isobars.
Where is the wind the fastest?
a. Anticyclonic
b. Cyclonic
b. Cold katabatic
a. Difference in temperatures
b. A lot of friction
198. What prevents air from flowing directly from a high to a low pressure
a. Centripetal force
b. Centrifugal force
c. Pressure force
d. Coriolis force
199. What is the relationship between the 5000 ft wind and the surface in Southern hemisphere
a. surface winds are veered from the 5000ft and have the same speed
b. surface winds are backed from the 5000ft and have a slower speed
c.surface winds are veered from the 5000ft and have a slower speed
d. surface winds are backed from the 5000ft and have a faster speed
200. What is the relationship between the 2000 ft wind and the surface wind in the Northern
Hemisphere
a. Mixing of fronts
B. Horizontal pressure difference
c. Earth rotation
d. Surface friction
202. For the same pressure gradient at 50’N, 60’N and 40’N, the geostrophic wind speed is?
a. Greatest at 60N
b. Least at SON
c. Greatest at 4ON
203. The wind in the Northern Hemisphere at the surface and above the friction layer at 2000 would be?
b. The angle between the isobars and the wind direction is greatest in the afternoon
206. An aircraft is flying East to West in the Northern Hemisphere. What is happening to his altitude?
a. Bora
b. Harmattan
c. chinook
d. Ghibl
a. True, m/s
b. Magnetic, m/s
c. True, KT
d. Magnetic, KT
210. If you fly with left drift in the Northern Hemisphere, what is happening to surface pressure?
a. increases
b. Decreases
d. Cannot tell
a. Сb
b. Ns
c. Cu
d. Ci
b. Ice crystals
c. Water droplets
d. Smoke particles
a. Ns+SC
b. Ac + As
C. Cb + St
d. Cl + CS
a. St
b. Cb
с. СІ
d. Ac
a. Poor visibility
b. Thunderstorms
c. Turbulence
a. Mountain waves
b. Instability
c. Developing Cu and Cb
a. Cb
b. Ns
c. Sc
d. Ci
a. Ns
b.ci
c.cs
d. Ac
220. Clouds classified as low level are considered to have a base height of:
a. 500 - 1000ft
b. 1000 - 2000ft
d. 100 - 200ft
a. 1000m
b. 500m
c. 200m
a. St
b. Ac
c.cc
d. Ns
223. Altostratus is
a. fog
b. hail
c. cloud
d. mist
225. Which of the following clouds may extend into more than one layer?
a. Stratus.
b. Altocumulus.
C. Cirrus.
d. Nimbostratus
226. Which cloud would you encounter the most intensive rain?
a. ci
b.NS
c. St
d. Sc
a. Water droplets
b. Ice crystals
a. NS
b. AS
c. CS
d: CB
229. When would you mostly likely get fair weather Cu?
a. 15:00
b. 12.00
c. 17:00
d. 07.00
a. As
b. Acc
C. NS
d. CI
a. RVR
b. Cloud height
c. Met Vis
d. red cirrus
232. Which of the following will indicate medium level instability, possibly leading to thunderstorms?
a. halo
b. altocumulus castelleneous
c. altocumulus capillatus
d. red cirrus
a. 0' - 1500'
b. 1500' - 7000'
c. 7000'. 15000'
d. 1000' - 16500'
234. When a CC layer lies over a West European plane in summer, with a mean terrain height of 500 m
above sea level, the average cloud base could be expected
235. Which of the following cloud types can stretch across all three cloud levels (low, medium and high
level)?
a. CI
b. ST
с. АС
d. CB
236. Which of the following cloud types can stretch across at least two cloud levels?
a. ST
b. NS
c. CI
d. SC
a. Sc
b. Cb
c. Ns
d. Ts
b. Subsistence
a. Subsidence
b. Decrease in temperature
c. Increase pressure
d. Convection
240. cu is an indication of
b. stability
a. St, As
b. Cb, CC
c. Cu, Ns
d. Cu, Cb
a. instability
b. rising air
c. sinking air
a. Freezing pellets
c. Freezing graupel
244. From which of the following clouds are you least likely to get precipitation in summer?
a. CS/NS
b.CS/AS
c. CB/CU
d. CU/ST
245. A layer of air cooling at the SALR compared to the DALR would give what kind of cloud?
a. Stratus if saturated
b. Cumulus if saturated
c. No cloud if saturated
d. Convective cloud
a. Orographic uplift.
d. Advection.
a. 20 km
b. 50 km
c. 4 km
d. 400 m
a. Water vapour
b. Fog
c. Any cloud
d. Hail
250. A microburst
b. has a diameter up to 4 km
251. 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
a. A high speed downdraft of air with a higher temperature than its surroundings
c. A small low pressure system where the wind circulates at high speed
d. A high speed downburst of air with a generally lower temperature than its
surroundings
253. Which thunderstorms move forward the fastest?
b. Thermal thunderstorms.
c. Orographic thunderstorms.
d. Frontal thunderstorms.
254. In addition to a lifting action, what are two other conditions necessary for thunderstorm
formation?
255. Aircraft struck by lightning may sometimes get considerable damage and at least temporarily the
manoeuvring of the aircraft will be made more difficult. Which one of the following statements is
correct?
a. Aircraft made by composite material may get severe damage, the crew may be blinded and
temporarily lose the hearing
b. An aircraft made by metal has a certain capacity to attract a lightning, but the lightning will follow the
surface and therefore ng damage will be caused.
c. An aircraft has in the atmosphere the same qualities as a "Faradays cage", which means that struck
oflightning seldon occurs. But if it happens, the result will be an occasional engine failure. The crew may
get a shock.
d. Aircraft made by composite material can't conduct a lightning and will therefore very seldom be
struck.
256. Which thunderstorms generally develop in the afternoon in summer over land in moderate
latitudes?
a. Airmass thunderstorms
d. Occlusion thunderstorms
a. 1 to 2 hours
b. About 30 minutes,
c. 1 to 5 minutes
258. An airborne weather radar installation makes it possible to detect the location of
a. all clouds
b. cumulonimbus, but provided that cloud of this type is accompanied by falls of hail
260. What are the meteorological prerequisites, at low level, for thunderstorms formed by lifting
processes, over land?
c. Subsidence, inversion
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
a. continuous up draughts
b. continuous downdraughts
c. frequent lightning
d. rain starting at surface
263. In which stage of the life cycle of a single thunderstorm cell occur both up- and downdrafts
simultaneously?
a. Cumulus stage
b. Dissipating stage
c. In all stages
d. Mature stage
a. Fog
c. Thunderstorms
b. mature stage.
c. cumulus stage
d. dissipating stage.
267. During the life cycle of a thunderstorm, which stage is characterized predominantly by downdrafts?
a. Anvil stage
b. Dissipating stage
c. Cumulus stage
d. Mature stage
C. mature stage.
d. dissipating stage.
270. What feature is normally associated with the cumulus stage of a thunderstorm?
a. Continuous updraft
b. Roll cloud
c. Frequent lightning
272. The diameter and the life time of a typical microburst are in the order of
273. During which stage of thunderstorm development are rotor winds characterized by roll clouds most
likely to occur?
b. Mature stage.
c. Cumulus stage.
d. Dissipating stage.
274. Large hail stones
275. In which of the following areas is the highest frequency of thunderstorms encountered?
a. Temperate
b. Tropical
c. Polar
d. Subtropical
c. frontal occlusion
d. thermal triggering.
277. What is the relationship between meteorological visibility and RVR in homogeneous fog?
a. 2,000 ft
b. 5,000 ft
c. 10,000 ft.
d. 500 ft.
281. Under which of these conditions is radiation fog most likely to form?
a. Little or no cloud.
282. Which of the following conditions is most likely to lead to the formation of advection fog?
283 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.
284. Flight visibility from the cockpit during approach in a tropical downpour can decrease to minimal:
a. about 500m
b. about 1000m.
c. tens of metres.
d. about 200m.
285. The most likely reason for radiation fog to dissipate or become low stratus is:
b. surface cooling.
c. a low level temperature inversion.
288. Which of the following conditions is most likely to lead to the formation of steam fog (arctic
smoke)?
289. Which of the following circumstances most favour the development of radiation fog?
a. Moist air over land during clear night with little wind.
b. Easterly, 10kt.
c. Calm.
d. Northerly, 10kt.
293. Which of the following weather conditions favour the formation of radiation fog?
294. At what time of day, or night, is radiation fog most likely to occur?
c. At sunset
d. Late evening
295. What conditions are most likely to lead to the formation of hill fog?
c. Precipitation which is lifted by the action of moderate winds striking the range.
296. 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 airmass.
297. 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.
299. While approaching your target aerodrome you receive the following message:
a. length of runway which a pilot in an aircraft on the ground would see, on the threshold of runway 23.
c. portion of runway which a pilot on the threshold of any of the runways would with runway 23
inservice.
d. minimum visibility at this aerodrome, with runway 23 being the one in service.
300. Which of the following is most likely to lead to the formation of radiation fog?
301. What type of fog is most likely to form over flat land during a clear night, with calm of light wind
conditions?
a. Orographic
b. Radiation
c. Advection.
d. Steam.
302. In general, the meteorological visibility during rainfall compared to during drizzle is:
a. greater.
b. the same.
c. less
303. Which type of fog is likely to form when air having temperature of 15°C and dew point of 12°C
blows at 10 knots over a sea surface having temperatures of 5°C?
a. Steam fog.
b. Frontal fog
c. Advection fog.
d. Radiation fog.
c. that is stable.
305. The range of wind speed in which radiation fog is most likely to form is:
b. above 15kt.
c. below 5kt.
306. In the vicinity of industriala smoke is most likely to affect surface visibility when:
b. terrestrial radiation
d. advection fog.
a. haze.
b. drizzle.
c. low stratus
309. When the temperature and dew point are less than one degree apart the weather onditions are
most likely to be:
c. unlimited visibility
310. Large supercooled water drops, which freeze on impact on an aircraft, form
A rime ice
B hoar frost
C cloudy ice
D clear ice
311. Two aircraft, one with a sharp wing profile (s), and the other with a thick profile (T), are flying
through the same cloud with same true airspeed. The cloud consists of small supercooled droplets.
Which of the following statements is most correct concerning ice accretion?
c. neither of the aircraft accumulate ice due to the small size of droplets
314. You have been flying for some time in dense layered cloud. The outside air temperature is -25°C.
Which of the following statements is true?
b.If you do not have weather radar on board there is no need to worry as CB is unlikely to form in such
cloud
315. A vertical temperature profile indicates the possibility of severe icing when the temperature profile
316. In which of these cloud types can icing be virtually ruled out?
A NS
b. CU
c. CI
d. SC
319. How does a pilot react to heavy freezing rain at 2000 FT/AGL, when he is unable to deice, nor land?
320. In which of these cloud types can icing be virtually ruled out?
a. SC
b. NS
c. CS
d. AS
c. water vapour turning directly into ice crystals on the aircraft surface
322. While descending through a cloud cover at high level, a small amount of a white and rough powder-
like contamination is detected
a. Rime ice.
b. Clear ice.
c. mixed ice.
d. Frost.
326. During the formation of rime ice in flight, water droplets freeze
327. Under which conditions would you expect the heaviest clear ice accretion to occur in a CB?
Be followed?
a. Extreme
b. Moderate
c. Light
d. Severe
A clear ice.
b. hoar frost.
c. dry ice.
d. rime ice.
a. Are supercooled
b. are frozen
334. What type of fronts are most likely to be present during the winter in Central Europe when
Temperatures close to the ground are below 0°C, and freeting rain starts to fall?
a. warm fronts,warm occlusions.
b. Cold occlusions.
d. Cold fronts
335. In which environment is aircraft structural ice most likely to have the highest rate accretion?
a. Stratus clouds.
b. Snow
c. Freezing rain.
d. Cirrus douds
336. Which of the following conditions is most likely to cause airframe icing
a. SHSN
b. PE
c. FZRA
d. GR
338. Which of the following statements is true regarding moderate-to-severe airframe icing?
339. On the approach, the surface temperature is given as -5°C. The freezing
Level is at 3000 FT/AGL at 4000 FT/AGL, there is a solid cloud layer from which rain is falling. According
to the weather briefing the clouds are due to an inversion caused by warm air sliding up and over an
Inclined front Would you expect Icing?
342. Which cloud type may indicate the presence of severe turbulence?
a. Cirrocumulus
b. Nimbostratus
c. Altocumulus lenticularis
d. Stratocumulus
343. Low level vertical wind shear can be expected during the night
b. In unstable atmospheres
347. What is normally the most effective measure to reduce or avoid CAT effects?
b. Change of course.
c. Increase of speed
d. Decrease of speed.
a. Large, abrupt changes in altitude or attitude occur but the aircraft may only be out of control
momentarily.
c. Changes in altitude or attitude occur but the aircraft remains in positive control at all times.
d. rapid and somewhat rythmic bumpiness is experienced without appreciable changes in altitude or
altitude.
350. On a clear summer day, turbulence caused by solar heating is most pronounced
351. Which degree of aircraft turbulence is determined by the following ICAO description?”There may
be moderate changes in aircraft attitude and/or altitude but the aircraft remains in positive control at all
times. Usually, small variations in air speed. Changes in accelerometer Readings of 0.5 to 1.0 g at the
aircraft’s enter of gravity. Occupants feel strain against seat belts. Loose objects move about. Food
service and walking is difficult.”
a. Severe.
b. Violent.
c. Moderate.
d. Light
352. 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.
353. 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.
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
354. 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
a. severe
b. extreme
c. moderate
d. light
355. 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 alr at mountain top altitude and a wind at least 20 knots blowing across the mountain ridge.
356. Under which of the following conditions is the most severe CAT likely to be experienced?
357. 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
358. The most dangerous low level wind shears are encountered
c. during any period when wind speed is greater than 35 kt and near valleys
359. 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
360. The degree clear air turbulence experienced by an aircraft is proportional to the
361. Which cloud type may indicate the presence of severe turbulence?
a. Cirrocumulus
b. Nimbostratus
c. Altocumulus lenticularis
d. Stratocumulus
a. strong katabatic winds in mountainous areas and accompanied by the heavy precipitation
b. water or Ice particles falling out of a doud that evaporate before reaching the ground
c. strong downdraughts in the polar jet stream, associated with jet streaks
a. development of thermallows
364. Above and below a low level inversion the wind is likely to
365. 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
366. A flight is to depart from an airport with runways 09 and 27. Surface wind is 270/05; an inversion is
reported at 300 feet with turbulence and wind shear. The wind just above the inversion is 090/30. What
is
c. Depart runway 27 with maximum throttle during the passage through the inversion.
367. 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.
c. It will be decreasing.
368. In which approximare direction does the centre of a frontal depression move?
369. In a polar front depression, an occlusion is called a warm occlusion when the cold air
b. behind is colder than the cold air in front, with the warm air being at a high altitude.
c. behind is less cold than the cold air in front, with the warm air at a high altitude.
a. at an occluded front
a. Summer
b. Winter
374. Which of the following is typical for the passage of a cold front in the summer ?
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
a. Warm occlusion.
b. Cold front
c. Warm front
d. Cold occlusion.
378. 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. Siberian landmass.
380. 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?
c. An increase in tailwind.
d. A decrease in headwind.
382. 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
a. The coldest air mass behind and the less cold air in front of the occlusion; the warm air mass is above
ground level.
b. The coldest air in front of and the less cold air is behind the occlusion; the warm air
c. The coldest air in front of and the warm air behind the occlusion; the less cold air is
d. The coldest air behind and the warm air in front of the occlusion; the less cold air mass
385. Where is the coldest air to be found, in an occlusion with cold front characteristics?
a. Fair weather CU
b. BKN CU and CB
c. Sky clear
d. ST with drizzle
387. 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. Continous 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.
388. What is the surface visibility most likely to be, in a warm sector of tropical maritime air, during the
summer?
390. During a cross-country flight at FL 50, you observe the following sequence of clouds:Nimbostratus,
Altostratus, Cirrostratus, Cirrus. Which of the following are you most likely to encounter?
b. A strong downdraught.
c. Increasing temperatures.
d. Decreasing temperatures.
391. How do you recognize a cold air pool?
a. A cold air pool may only be recognized on the surface chart as a high pressure area.
d. A cold air pool may only be recognized on the surface chart as a low pressure area.
392. What is encountered during the summer, over land, in the centre of a cold air pool?
a. Nothing (CAVOK).
d. Fine weather CU
c. The air mass behind the front is more unstable than the air mass ahead of the front
d. The air mass ahead of the front is drier than the air mass behind the front
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
rate
395. What is the relative movement of the two air masses along a cold front?
396. What type of precipitation would you expect at an active unstable cold front?
a. Freezing rain
b. Light to moderate continuous rain
c. Drizzle
397. 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
c. A cold front
d. A warm front
398. 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.
399. Which of the following conditions are you most likely to encounter when approaching an active
warm front at medium to low level?
a. 1/150
b. 1/50
c. 1/300
d. 1/500
402. Which of the following zones is most likely to encounter little or no precipitation?
a. Frontal zones.
b. Occlusions.
c. The north side of the alps with a prevailing Foehn from the south.
d. The north side of the alps with a prevailing Foehn from the north.
403. 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?