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Prevailing winds include the Trade winds (in the subtropics), Westerlies (in the mid-latitudes), and Polar Easterlies poleward of there. They are called prevailing winds because they tend to usually blow in roughly the same direction. The reason for this has to do with where the somewhat permanent areas of high and low pressure are with respect to latitude, resulting in a flow of air that gets deflected by the Coriolis Effect and moves the wind in the direction mentioned.
prevailing winds?
The high solar intensity at equatorial latitudes causes intense heating at the equator, which produces powerful convection currents called Prevailing Winds. The Doldrums are where the prevailing winds at the Equator die.
Global winds also occur because large high- and low-pressure zones alternate from the North Pole to the South Pole about every 30° latitude (north-south location). Both poles have high-pressure air masses (cold, dry, high pressure) and the air above the equator is a low-pressure zone (hot, moist, low pressure). Because high pressure always invades low pressure, the resulting winds-where the high- and low-pressure zones meet-are pretty reliable. They are known as the polar easterlies (at 60° latitude north and south); the westerlies or prevailing winds (at 30° latitude north and south); and the tropical easterlies or trade winds (at the equator, 0° latitude). I hope this helps your question! :)
Horse latitude winds are dry, stable, and often calm areas that are found around 30 degrees latitude in both the Northern and Southern Hemispheres. These winds are typically associated with high-pressure systems and are characterized by weak or variable winds. The term "horse latitude" originated from the stories of Spanish sailors throwing their horses overboard when they became stranded in these calm zones during their voyages.
prevailing winds?
Prevailing winds include the Trade winds (in the subtropics), Westerlies (in the mid-latitudes), and Polar Easterlies poleward of there. They are called prevailing winds because they tend to usually blow in roughly the same direction. The reason for this has to do with where the somewhat permanent areas of high and low pressure are with respect to latitude, resulting in a flow of air that gets deflected by the Coriolis Effect and moves the wind in the direction mentioned.
The types of prevailing winds include the trade winds, westerlies, and polar easterlies. Trade winds blow from the subtropical high-pressure belts towards the equator; westerlies blow from the mid-latitude high-pressure areas towards the poles; and polar easterlies blow from the polar highs towards lower latitudes.
prevailing winds?
The high solar intensity at equatorial latitudes causes intense heating at the equator, which produces powerful convection currents called Prevailing Winds. The Doldrums are where the prevailing winds at the Equator die.
The Polar Easterlies are dry prevailing winds that blow from high pressure areas in the north and south poles. These winds are also called Polar Hadley cells.
The high solar intensity at equatorial latitudes causes intense heating at the equator, which produces powerful convection currents called Prevailing Winds. The Doldrums are where the prevailing winds at the Equator die.
Global winds also occur because large high- and low-pressure zones alternate from the North Pole to the South Pole about every 30° latitude (north-south location). Both poles have high-pressure air masses (cold, dry, high pressure) and the air above the equator is a low-pressure zone (hot, moist, low pressure). Because high pressure always invades low pressure, the resulting winds-where the high- and low-pressure zones meet-are pretty reliable. They are known as the polar easterlies (at 60° latitude north and south); the westerlies or prevailing winds (at 30° latitude north and south); and the tropical easterlies or trade winds (at the equator, 0° latitude). I hope this helps your question! :)
it depends on the movement of huge air masses. air masses are moved from place to place by prevaling windsPrevailing winds can move rain producing clouds into or out of an area, the jet stream controls most of the weather in the northern hemisphere.
The prevailing winds are from the east. Due to the high Andes Mountains any moisture carried by these winds falls on the eastern side of the range and never arrives in the Atacama.
Three factors that affect precipitation are, winds, the presence of mountains, and seasonal winds. Hope that helped (:
Polar easterlies are dry, cold prevailing winds that blow from the east. They emanate from the polar highs, areas of high pressure around the North and South Poles. Polar easterlies flow to low-pressure areas in sub-polar regions. Westerlies are prevailing winds that blow from the west at midlatitudes.