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Air and Ocean Circulation Introduction: • Different substances take different amounts of energy to heat up. – 1 kg of water takes about 4X more energy to heat than 1 kg of air • This property is called Heat Capacity. • Substances with a high heat capacity (can hold a lot of heat energy) are called Heat Sinks. – Oceans and atmosphere are the most important Prevailing Winds: • Winds that affect large areas of the world and are relatively constant. • Caused by a combination of heating from the Sun and the Earth’s rotation . • Sun warms the Earth more near the equator than anywhere else (so it’s hotter there). • The hot air by the equator “rises” towards the Earth’s poles until about 30o latitude (30th parallel) where it cools and “falls” again. • When the warm air rises, it creates an area of low pressure under it, which pushes the air up into the sky. • Once the air is high enough, it spreads towards the Earth’s poles and cools down. • The cooler air sinks back to the Earth’s surface, resulting in an area of high pressure. • This circular rise and fall of warm and cool air is called a Convection Current. • Air also begins to rise and fall again at 60o. • There are 3 convection currents in each hemisphere. • Because of the Earth’s rotation, anything that travels a long distance (wind), appears to change direction. • This apparent movement is called the Coriolis Effect. • Imagine throwing a ball to your friend from a moving merry-go round. It would appear to twist, but in reality it just travels in a straight line. Ocean Currents: • Ocean currents are very similar to Prevailing Winds. • Water is heated at the equator and it drifts towards the poles. • Warm water rises to the top and colder water sinks towards the ocean floor. • This causes warm currents heading towards the poles and cooler currents underneath the surface, heading back towards the equator. • The Coriolis Effect still comes into play with ocean currents, but continents stop the nice patterns from occurring. • Warm ocean currents heat the air above them. • Areas with warmer ocean currents will have more rain, and areas with cooler ocean currents will be cooler and dryer.