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Global and Local Winds

Date post: 23-Feb-2016
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Global and Local Winds. i. What causes wind? . Caused by a difference in air pressure due to unequal heating of the atmosphere. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Global and Local Winds

Global and Local Winds

i

Page 2: Global and Local Winds

What causes wind? Caused by a difference in air pressure due to

unequal heating of the atmosphere.

Page 3: Global and Local Winds

Winds are created by….• Heating the air, decreases pressure (warmair rises creating a low pressure)• Cool air rushes into replace the warm air(cooler dense air, produces high pressure)• As air goes from high to low pressure,winds form.

Page 4: Global and Local Winds

Coriolis Effect• Coriolis Effect – Rotation of the Earth causes moving air and water to change directions• Northern Hemisphere winds curve to the right• Southern Hemisphere winds curve to the left.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mcPs_OdQOYU

Page 5: Global and Local Winds

There are 2 types of winds…

1. Local Winds2. Global Winds

Page 6: Global and Local Winds

• Don’t travel North and South because of the Earth rotating on its axis.• 4 Types of Global Winds – Doldrums

– Trade Winds– Prevailing Westerlies– Polar Easterlies

Global Winds

Page 7: Global and Local Winds

Visual of Global Winds

Page 8: Global and Local Winds

Doldrums• These are located at the equator, surface winds

are calm and weak.

Why are they called doldrums?Sailors found that there were no winds near the equator for a period of time. The ships were essentially stuck in one place, not being able to move forward. These calm periods were called doldrums.

Today, to be “stuck in the doldrums” means that you’d like to be doing something, but you’re stuck waiting for something to happen so you can begin moving forward.

Page 9: Global and Local Winds

• Named from their ability to quickly propel trading ships across the ocean- found between about 30° latitude and the equator - steady and blow about 11 to 13 mph- In the Northern Hemisphere, the trade winds blow from the northeast and are known as the Northeast Trade Winds- In the Southern Hemisphere, the winds blow from the southeast and are called the Southeast Trade Winds.

Trade Winds

Page 10: Global and Local Winds

Prevailing Westerlies

• Strong winds• Located in the belt from 30-60 degrees latitude in both hemispheres.• Has an impact on the US weather

Page 11: Global and Local Winds

• Cold, but weak winds• Near the north and south poles• US weather is influenced by these• Cooling takes place between the 50-60degree latitude as it approaches the poles

Polar Easterlies

Page 12: Global and Local Winds

Jet Stream• Discovered in 1940’s• Can be found in the upper troposphere• Strong high speed and high pressure• Moves west to east across the US, movingstorms

Page 13: Global and Local Winds

What brings certain weather phenomenon?

El Nino La Nina• occurs when the surface

temperature rises above the normal water temperature in the Equatorial Pacific Ocean creating more humidity in the atmosphere

• Known to increase number of hurricanes

• Occur more frequently (every 3-7 years)

occurs when the surface temperature falls below the normal water temperature in the Equatorial Pacific Ocean creating a more dry atmosphere

Known to create drought conditions

Page 14: Global and Local Winds

Local Winds• Cover short distances• Blow from any direction

• 2 Types of Local Winds– Sea Breezes- from sea to land– Land Breezes – from land to sea

Page 15: Global and Local Winds

What’s the difference?

Page 16: Global and Local Winds

How do sea and land breezes work?


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