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Atmospheric Pressure and Wind Chapter 15 Section 3 Why Air Moves • Wind is created by differences in air pressure • Warm air is less dense and creates areas of low pressure • Warm air rises • Cold air is more dense and creates areas of high pressure • Cold air sinks • Surface winds blow from polar high-pressure areas to equatorial low-pressure areas Why Air Moves • The uneven heating of the Earth produces pressure belt, this happens in increments of 30 degrees latitude • Air doesn’t move in one large circular pattern from the poles to the equator • At 30 degrees N & S the warm air from the equator cools and sinks • At the poles the cold air sinks and starts to warm and become less dense at 60 degrees N & S and rise • The curving of moving objects, such as wind, by the Earth’s rotation is called the Coriolis effect Types of Winds • There are two types of winds; local & global winds • Global winds are part of a pattern of air circulation that moves across the Earth • These winds travel longer distances • The winds that blow from 30 degrees latitude to the equator in the north & south hemisphere is called trade winds • The area of low pressure at the equator is known as the Doldrums Types of Winds • The Westerlies are wind belts found in both the Northern and Southern Hemispheres between 30 and 60 degrees latitude • The polar easterlies are wind belts that extend from the poles to 60 degrees latitude in both hemispheres • The jet streams are narrow belts of high-speed winds that blow in the upper troposphere & lower stratosphere Types of Winds • Local winds are influenced by the geography of an area • As air warms and becomes less dense it rises and produces lower pressure • Colder air becomes more dense and sinks producing areas of high pressure • A land breeze is produced by an area of low pressure over the water • The water hold stays warmer than the land does at night causing the air to warm and rise pulling the cooler land air out to the sea Types of Winds • A sea breeze occurs when a land mass heats the air above it, the warmer less dense air rises and is replace by cooler more dense from the sea • A mountain breeze occurs when the mountains cool quicker than the valley below, the cool mountain air is more dense and sinks into the valley • A valley breeze occurs when the valley air heats up during the day, the warmer less dense air moves up the mountains face