A southeast wind is from the southeast toward the northwest.
Wind is a cousin to the pressure. Pressure moves the wind.
Wind blows from high-pressure areas to low-pressure areas. It does this simply because nature is trying to restore a balance between the different pressure areas.
It blows as far as necissary to balance either the high or low pressure zone that caused it.
High to Low.
Yes, winds always blow from areas of high pressure to areas of low pressure.
No. Wind blows away from areas of high pressure to areas of low pressure.
Ignoring the coriolis effect, winds blow form high to low, therefore the wind would blow from west to east, it would be a westerly wind.
A southeast wind is from the southeast toward the northwest.
COUNTER CLOCKWISE= low pressure CLOCK WISE= high pressure
Wind is a cousin to the pressure. Pressure moves the wind.
Wind is created by air pressure, there's a law in meteorology, winds will usually blow from high pressure areas to low pressure areas. That's what this question would be asking for.
Wind blows from high-pressure areas to low-pressure areas. It does this simply because nature is trying to restore a balance between the different pressure areas.
It blows as far as necissary to balance either the high or low pressure zone that caused it.
High to Low.
The wind blow in towards the low.
It would blow from the mass of high pressure to the mass of low pressure.Answer 2Looking down from a satellite, the northern hemisphere high pressure systems move in a clockwise direction and anticlockwise in the southern hemisphere.Low pressure systems are the reverse of these, IE clockwise in the southern hemisphere and anticlockwise in the northern hemisphere.