Geography 1.1.1 Climate as a Global System

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6 Terms

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Global Atmospheric Circulation

  • The global atmospheric circulation can be described as a worldwide system of winds moving solar heat energy FROM the equator TO the poles to reach a balance in temperature

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Describe Wind formation

  • Air always moves from high pressure to lower pressure, and this movement of air generates wind

  • Winds are large scale movements of air due to differences in air pressure

  • This pressure difference is because the Sun heats the Earth's surface unevenly

  • Insolation that reaches the Earth's surface is greater at the equator than at the poles due to the Earth's curvature and angle of the Earth's tilt

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Diagram showing how angle of insolation spreads solar radiation over a wider area at the poles than the equator

angle-of-insolation

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Describe Wind pressure cell

wind-pressure-cell

  • Hot air rises and cooler air sinks through the process of convection

  • This irregular heating of the Earth’s surface creates pressure cells

  • Each cell generates different weather patterns

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global-atmospheric-circulation

  • Air movement within the cell is roughly circular and moves surplus heat from equatorial regions to other parts of the Earth

  • In both hemispheres, heat energy transfer occurs where 3 atmospheric circulation cells meet

  • These are the Hadley, Ferrel and Polar cells and are shown via the tri-cellular model

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