BrettNortje
Banned
- Joined
- Jul 14, 2016
- Messages
- 793
- Reaction score
- 22
- Location
- Cape Town
- Gender
- Male
- Political Leaning
- Centrist
This is the study of climate and weather. if we were to observe that the climate depends on where the oceans and mountains are, and, what type of ocean it is receiving wind from, then there would be a 'formula' for each region, yes?
So, where does wind come from? it usually comes from air pressure that gets generated from waves in the ocean and mountains that the air pressure gets put to the test with. this wind brings temperatures high in the air from place to place, or, at least alters them. the wind itself comes from gaseous exchanges between the rest of the air. wind is worst where there is a hurricane and this comes from the oceans, of course, where the gases are 'mixed' by the ocean currents. this leaves us with the hurricane as the water will swell around making the air more dense, yet a hurricane comes from low pressure systems, where the the winds are swirled around with a 'sudden exchange of great force.' this could be from a whirl pool too, as the wind would be sucked into the ocean in the maw of the pool, and then continue spinning around when the maw closes, yes?
Now, if the wind alters the climate of the place, there must be ways for the pressure to grow and recede. in the desert the wind plays on the dunes, not the dunes on the wind, so we could say that when the pressure meets little resistance, through stable amounts of air in various gas like mixtures - as there is less oxygen in the desert, then the mixture will change, and the air will 'blow.'
So, where does wind come from? it usually comes from air pressure that gets generated from waves in the ocean and mountains that the air pressure gets put to the test with. this wind brings temperatures high in the air from place to place, or, at least alters them. the wind itself comes from gaseous exchanges between the rest of the air. wind is worst where there is a hurricane and this comes from the oceans, of course, where the gases are 'mixed' by the ocean currents. this leaves us with the hurricane as the water will swell around making the air more dense, yet a hurricane comes from low pressure systems, where the the winds are swirled around with a 'sudden exchange of great force.' this could be from a whirl pool too, as the wind would be sucked into the ocean in the maw of the pool, and then continue spinning around when the maw closes, yes?
Now, if the wind alters the climate of the place, there must be ways for the pressure to grow and recede. in the desert the wind plays on the dunes, not the dunes on the wind, so we could say that when the pressure meets little resistance, through stable amounts of air in various gas like mixtures - as there is less oxygen in the desert, then the mixture will change, and the air will 'blow.'