polar creep
Yes, an ocean current moving from the equator toward a pole is typically warm. These currents carry warm water from the equator to higher latitudes, impacting the temperature and climate of the areas they flow through.
== == Coriolis Effect Hope it helps.. :)
The North Equatorial Current moves from the north pole towards the equator in the Northern Hemisphere. This current is a major ocean current that flows east-to-west between 10°-20°N. It is driven by the trade winds and plays a significant role in redistributing heat across the Earth's surface.
The coreolis effect.
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An ocean current that is moving toward the equator has the same effects as those of a geostrophic current.
Yes, an ocean current moving from the equator toward a pole is typically warm. These currents carry warm water from the equator to higher latitudes, impacting the temperature and climate of the areas they flow through.
== == Coriolis Effect Hope it helps.. :)
sureface current
The North Equatorial Current moves from the north pole towards the equator in the Northern Hemisphere. This current is a major ocean current that flows east-to-west between 10°-20°N. It is driven by the trade winds and plays a significant role in redistributing heat across the Earth's surface.
Turn towards the right
If you mean straight down, you would be near the equator.
Turn towards the right
The coreolis effect.
Turn towards the right
It begins moving back toward the equator. Those occasions occur near June 21 and near December 21.
Warm air toward high latitudes and cool air toward the equator