The warm water will warm the lowest layer of air and make it more humid. This warmer, moister air will rise, likely forming clouds and precipitation. Depending on how much temperature contrast there is, it may even lead to the formation of waterspouts and thunderstorms.
The type of weather results you get when the warm waters of the Gulf Stream meet with cold wind is fog.steam????Nearly right ! The answer is fog.
Jet Stream
North winds blowing to the southwest is not a typical occurrence. Winds generally move from areas of high pressure to areas of low pressure. If north winds are blowing to the southwest, it could be due to local topography or weather patterns causing a deviation from the usual wind direction.
Converging warm winds over warm ocean waters can be the starting point for the formation of hurricanes or tropical cyclones. The warm ocean waters provide the energy needed for the storm to develop and strengthen, while the converging winds help to create the necessary circulation patterns for the storm to intensify.
The North!
When warm waters of the gulf stream meet cold winds from the North hurricanes occur.
The type of weather results you get when the warm waters of the Gulf Stream meet with cold wind is fog.steam????Nearly right ! The answer is fog.
as the stream travels north, it transfers heat and moisture from its warm waters to the air above. westerly winds carry the warm air to the british isles and to scandonavia... :)
The winds of a jet stream blow storms.
Westerly winds bring mild, humid air from the North Atlantic Drift current, which itself is fed by the warm waters of the Gulf Stream.
The winds of a jet stream blow storms.
they could sail upstream and down stream
The winds of a jet stream blow storms.
As a veteran of one east to west crossing via the trade winds, the best west to east routes are to the north, US - Bermuda - Azores - Europe. You have the benefit of the westerly winds and the Atlantic high. July is late to leave for a west to east crossing, the risk of hurricanes is increasing. Get yourself J Cornell's "World Cruising Routes." Best of Sailing!
Well, the winds start from the west to start the current and then it will form the gulf stream
The jet stream.
The "Jet Stream".