What is Anabatic Wind?
Local winds that blow from slopes to peaks as a result of the heating of the top slopes without being affected by general pressure changes. Generally, the term is used for upward air currents, vertical movements in the formation of cumulus clouds, and valley breezes rather than anabatic winds. Anabatic winds are less common than katabatic winds, which occur through the opposite process.
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A fixed potential temperature line on adiabats, or the process of thermodynamic changes within a system without any exchange...
In a severe storm, with a swirling motion in its left rear quadrant, a vertically rotating column of air, often seen with...
Any form of water - liquid or solid - that falls from the atmosphere to the Earth's surface, including rain, snow, sleet,...
Thermodynamic changes occurring within a system without any exchange of heat with the surroundings. In the atmosphere, changes...
A measure of how hot it feels when relative humidity is combined with the actual air temperature, often referred to as the...
A mass of very cold, dry air that mostly originates over the Arctic Ocean.
Jet streams are strong, fast-flowing air currents in the upper levels of the atmosphere. They form when warm air masses meet...
A distinct layer in a body of water where the temperature changes rapidly with depth, separating warmer surface water from...
A bomb cyclone is a large mid-latitude storm that forms when a storm’s central pressure drops (i.e. “bombs out”), resulting...
The jet stream forming the boundary between tropical air and sub-tropical air, characterized by isothermal compression and...
