corolis effect...or..coriolis effect...something with those letters...
wind moves fronts along and causes the weather to change drastically or relatively stay the same
Weather systems in the Northern Hemisphere are influenced by the Coriolis effect, which causes moving air or water to be deflected to the right. This is due to the Earth's rotation creating a force that deflects moving objects. In the Southern Hemisphere, the Coriolis effect causes movement to the left.
The Earth's atmosphere is the layer that helps protect the planet from asteroids. When asteroids enter the Earth's atmosphere, friction causes them to heat up and break apart, reducing the impact of the asteroid on the Earth's surface.
Asteroids are safer in a circular orbit than an elliptical orbit because being in an elliptical orbit causes them to tumble in an erratic manner. Larger asteroids are sometimes referred to as planetoids.
This causes a warmer climate in these areas.
For an object such as a planet or moon to have weather, it must have an atmosphere. Asteroids do not have strong enough gravity to maintain an atmosphere.
masive craters formed and the asteroids shatered thanks for reading this
The greenhouse effect causes an increase in global temperatures leading to climate change. This increase in temperatures can result in disrupted weather patterns, rising sea levels, and extreme weather events.
well...I think that this is possible cause as poplulation increases,they pollute more which warms the ATMOSPHERE. This causes the change of weather.
the sun causes the weather to be much hotter and the wind cause the weather to be more colder often and sometimes they may have no effect whatsoever at all
Meteors, or asteroids.
They have no effect on it whatsoever.
corolis effect...or..coriolis effect...something with those letters...
No. The term "superstition" refers, precisely, to unscientific beliefs - often about supposed cause and effect, when there is no good reason to assume that one thing causes another.
wind moves fronts along and causes the weather to change drastically or relatively stay the same
No. The term "superstition" refers, precisely, to unscientific beliefs - often about supposed cause and effect, when there is no good reason to assume that one thing causes another.