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GLOBAL WINDS (C) Copyright 2014 - all rights reserved www.cpalms.org WHAT IS WIND? • Wind is the movement of air caused by an uneven heating of the Earth’s surface. Image from: http://openclipart.org/image/300px/svg_to_png/67723/wind_blowing_cloud.png (C) Copyright 2014 - all rights reserved www.cpalms.org WHAT HEATS EARTH’S SURFACE? • Heat from the sun heats the surface of the Earth. • This heat arrives to Earth in the form of radiation. • Radiation is the transfer of energy by electromagnetic waves. • Radiation can transfer heat without direct contact between objects. • Solar radiation originates from the sun. (C) Copyright 2014 - all rights reserved www.cpalms.org Image from: https://c1.staticflickr.com/5/4073/4809356121_f37009063a_z.jpg (C) Copyright 2014 - all rights reserved www.cpalms.org COLLABORATION TIME TWO MINUTES Image from: https://c1.staticflickr.com/1/52/145149313_c9c75df6f8_z.jpg • Winds do not travel straight from the equator to poles. • Due to the cycling of hot, low pressure and less dense air with cold, high pressure, more dense air, wind travels via convection cells. Convection cells are: • Pockets of cycling warm, less dense, low pressure air with cool, denser high-pressure air. • Pressure difference results in global movement of air. (C) Copyright 2014 - all rights reserved www.cpalms.org CONVECTION CELLS Image from :http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/cd/AtmosphCirc2.png WHAT ARE GLOBAL WINDS? • Global winds are winds that are produced by the movement of air between the equator and the poles. • Image from http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/1/18/Map_prevailing_winds_on_earth.png (C) Copyright 2014 - all rights reserved www.cpalms.org (C) Copyright 2014 - all rights reserved www.cpalms.org COLLABORATION TIME TWO MINUTES Image from: https://c1.staticflickr.com/1/52/145149313_c9c75df6f8_z.jpg MAJOR GLOBAL WINDS •Polar Easterlies •Westerlies (prevailing) •Trade winds •Doldrums •Horse Latitudes (C) Copyright 2014 - all rights reserved www.cpalms.org DOLDRUMS • Little or low wind area near the equator where warm air rises. (C) Copyright 2014 - all rights reserved www.cpalms.org Image from :http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/cd/AtmosphCirc2.png TRADE WINDS • Winds that blow from the horse latitudes toward the equator. (C) Copyright 2014 - all rights reserved www.cpalms.org Image from :http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/cd/AtmosphCirc2.png (C) Copyright 2014 - all rights reserved www.cpalms.org COLLABORATION TIME TWO MINUTES Image from: https://c1.staticflickr.com/1/52/145149313_c9c75df6f8_z.jpg HORSE LATITUDES • Little or low wind area where air is falling. • Found at 30 degrees latitude. (C) Copyright 2014 - all rights reserved www.cpalms.org Image from :http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/cd/AtmosphCirc2.png WESTERLIES (PREVAILING) • Winds that blow from the west to the east. • Found between 30 and 60 degree latitudes. (C) Copyright 2014 - all rights reserved www.cpalms.org Image from :http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/cd/AtmosphCirc2.png POLAR EASTERLIES • Winds that blow away from the poles. • Blows from east to west. • Found between the poles and 60 degrees latitude. (C) Copyright 2014:http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/cd/AtmosphCirc2.png - all rights reserved www.cpalms.org Image from (C) Copyright 2014 - all rights reserved www.cpalms.org COLLABORATION TIME TWO MINUTES Image from: https://c1.staticflickr.com/1/52/145149313_c9c75df6f8_z.jpg