the primary source of ocean currents is the sun but other direct energy sources are
1. global wind patterns
a. trade winds
b. the westerly winds
*wind is the cause of surface currents in the oceans.
Vertical convection in both the ocean and atmosphere is caused by uneven HEATing.
The source of energy for convection in the ocean and atmosphere is heating from the sun.
wind and the moons gravitational pull
sun
the sun
sun
Vertical convection in both the ocean and atmosphere is caused by uneven HEATing.The source of energy for convection in the ocean and atmosphere is heating from the sun.
Vertical convection in both the ocean and atmosphere is caused by uneven HEATing.The source of energy for convection in the ocean and atmosphere is heating from the sun.
"Convection and conduction are similar because they both transfer energy." "The convection in warm, moist air provides the energy that powers thuderstorms and, on a larger scale, cyclones and hurricanes."
When convection occurs with very warm, moist air, thunderstorms can form. As warm, moist air flows up in a convection cell it cools and the moisture in it condenses. The condensation releases energy that powers the thunderstorm. Given the right conditions and the right interaction of wind currents, that thunderstorm may go on to produce a tornado.
The sun is major source of energy that power surface currents because the sun causes wind to blow and winds cause surface currents to form
Not only air temperature, but also barometric pressure differences contribute.
The Sun's energy powers it by separating out carbon and oxygen from carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. This is done by plants in a process called photosynthesis, which requires sunlight. The energy can be recovered later when the carbon in the plant tissues is burned with oxygen from the atmosphere, and that produces carbon dioxide and heat.
ummm...i think the sun powers the wind, and the wind powers the currents. that's what all of my sources say, but if im wrong, then.....well yeah you get the point.
Energy in the water cycle refers to heat from the sun, which powers the whole cycle, in particular the movement of water from oceans into the atmosphere (evaporation).
Ultimately yes. The "fuel" of most storms is warm moist air, which contains enormous amounts of thermal energy due to the high specific heat capacity of water vapor. When the water vapor condenses inside a thunderstorm that energy is released and powers wind currents. Given the right interactions these wind currents within a thunderstorm can produce a tornado.
convection currents = warm air rising, cold air sinking. Related to weather patterns because it can form a low pressure system, such as a mid-latitude cyclone, or cold/warm/stationary front. Check out this link (its a pic) for some help. http://www.cnsm.csulb.edu/departments/geology/people/bperry/geology303/_derived/geol303text.html_txt_atmoscell_big.gif just copy and paste into the browser.
The sun