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  2. Prevailing winds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prevailing_winds

    Wind direction changes due to the contour of the land. If there is a pass in the mountain range, winds will rush through the pass with considerable speed due to the Bernoulli principle that describes an inverse relationship between speed and pressure. The airflow can remain turbulent and erratic for some distance downwind into the flatter ...

  3. Weather front - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weather_front

    The term "anafront" describes boundaries which show instability, meaning air rises rapidly along and over the boundary to cause significant weather changes and heavy precipitation. A "katafront" is weaker, bringing smaller changes in temperature and moisture, as well as limited rainfall. [8]

  4. Wind - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wind

    Knowing the wind sampling average is important, as the value of a one-minute sustained wind is typically 14% greater than a ten-minute sustained wind. [16] A short burst of high speed wind is termed a wind gust ; one technical definition of a wind gust is: the maxima that exceed the lowest wind speed measured during a ten-minute time interval ...

  5. Warm front - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warm_front

    If the air mass is unstable, thunderstorms may precede and follow the front and temperature changes will be larger. [3] In the northern hemisphere, a warm front causes a shift of wind blowing from southeast to southwest, and in the southern hemisphere a shift from winds blowing from northeast to northwest. Common characteristics associated with ...

  6. Thermal wind - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermal_wind

    Jet streams (shown in pink) are well-known examples of thermal wind. They arise from the horizontal temperature gradients between the warm tropics and the colder polar regions. In atmospheric science, the thermal wind is the vector difference between the geostrophic wind at upper altitudes minus that at lower altitudes in the atmosphere.

  7. 'Feels like' temperature: What does it really mean and how ...

    www.aol.com/feels-temperature-does-really-mean...

    Spurred by a low-pressure storm off Canada's Hudson Bay, the game-time temperature read -9 degrees, with incessant wind making it feel like -38 degrees (often cited as -59 degrees under the old ...

  8. Weather forecasting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weather_forecasting

    Measurements of barometric pressure and the pressure tendency (the change of pressure over time) have been used in forecasting since the late 19th century. [66] The larger the change in pressure, especially if more than 3.5 hPa (2.6 mmHg), the larger the change in weather can be expected.

  9. Air current - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Air_current

    It is also referred as the geostrophic wind. [2] Pressure differences depend, in turn, on the average temperature in the air column. As the sun does not heat the Earth evenly, there is a temperature difference between the poles and the equator, creating air masses with more or less homogeneous temperature with latitude.