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can the wind be blowing and you not feel it?
is the wind always blowing?

2007-05-12 07:43:17 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Weather

5 answers

The wind is always blowing no matter what anyone says. If it wasn't, then how can it be cloudy one second and sunny the next???

2007-05-12 09:04:16 · answer #1 · answered by DNAngel 2 · 0 1

The wind at a place is seldom steady.Both the velocity and direction are found to vary with space and time.Sometimes the the fluctuations are sudden and short lived.These rapid fluctutions are known as gusts and lulls.Turbulence in the atmosphere is responsible for these lulls and gusts.The turbulence is usually minimum in the night and morning and maximum in the afternoon and evening.Hence the wind also is also light and steady in the morning and strong and turbulent in the later part of the day.The diurnal variation of wind is thus related to the temperature distribution in the lower atmosphere.Coastal stations experience the well-known diurnal variation in the form of sea breeze and land breeze.
Somtimes two opposite winds of equal velocity meet, the resultant may be a calm wind.For example when an easterly sea breeze meets a prevailing westerly wind this happens.Generally wind is always blowing.The calm wind we experience may be the resultant of different opposing winds.

2007-05-13 05:43:29 · answer #2 · answered by Arasan 7 · 0 0

The air around us is in constant motion to learn more go to this link
http://www.srh.noaa.gov/srh/jetstream/synoptic/wind.htm

Wind is simply the air in motion. Usually when we are talking about the wind it is the horizontal motion we are concerned about. If you hear a forecast of west winds of 10 to 20 mph that means the horizontal winds will be 10 to 20 mph FROM the west.

Although we cannot actually see the air moving we can measure its motion by the force that it applies on objects. For example, on a windy day leaves rustling or trees swaying indicate that the wind is blowing. Officially, a wind vane measures the wind direction and an anemometer measures the wind speed.

The vertical component of the wind is typically very small (except in thunderstorm updrafts) compared to the horizontal component, but is very important for determining the day to day weather. Rising air will cool, often to saturation, and can lead to clouds and precipitation. Sinking air warms causing evaporation of clouds and thus fair weather.

You have probably seen a surface map marked with H's and L's which indicate high and low pressure centers. Surrounding these "highs" and "lows" are lines called isobars. "Iso" means "equal" and a "bar" is a unit of pressure so an isobar means equal pressure. We connect these areas or equal pressure with a line. Everywhere along each line is constant pressure. The closer the isobars are packed together the stronger the pressure gradient is.

Pressure gradient is the difference in pressure between high and low pressure areas. Wind speed is directly proportional to the pressure gradient. This means the strongest winds are in the areas where the pressure gradient is the greatest.

Also, notice that the wind direction (yellow arrows) is clockwise around the high pressure system and counter-clockwise around the low pressure system. In addition, the direction of the wind is across the isobars slightly, away from the center of the high pressure system and toward the center of the low pressure system. Why does this happen? To understand we need to examine the forces that govern the wind.

There are three forces that cause the wind to move as it does. All three forces work together at the same time.

The pressure gradient force (Pgf) is a force that tries to equalize pressure differences. This is the force that causes high pressure to push air toward low pressure. Thus air would flow from high to low pressure if the pressure gradient force was the only force acting on it.

However, because of the earth's rotation, there is second force, the Coriolis force that affects the direction of wind flow. Named after Gustav-Gaspard Coriolis, the French scientist who described it mathematically in 1835, this force is what causes objects in the northern hemisphere to turn to the right and objects in the southern hemisphere to turn to the left.



One way to see this force in action is to see what happens when a straight line becomes a curve. Picture the Earth as a turntable (see number 1) spinning counter-clockwise. A ruler is placed over the turntable (see number 2) and a pencil will move in a straight line from the center to the edge while the turntable spins underneath. The result is a curved line on the turntable (see number 3).

When viewed from space, wind travels in a straight line. However, when view from the Earth, air (as well as other things in flight such as planes and birds) is deflected to the right in the northern hemisphere (red arrow on image at right). The combination of the two forces would cause the wind to blow parallel to straight isobars with high pressure on the right.

So why does air spiral out from highs and into lows? There is one other force, called Friction, which is the final component to determining the flow of wind. The surface of the earth is rough and it not only slows the wind down but it also causes the diverging winds from highs and converging winds near lows.

What happens to the converging winds near a low? A property called mass continuity states that mass cannot be created or destroyed in a given area. So air cannot "pile up" at a given spot. It has to go somewhere so it is forced to rise. As it rises it cools. When air cools it can hold less water vapor so some of the invisible vapor condenses, forming clouds and precipitation. That is why there is often inclement weather near low pressure areas.

What about the diverging air near a high? As the air spreads away from the high, air from above must sink to replace it. Sinking air warms. As air warms it can hold more water vapor, which means that clouds will tend to evaporate. That is why fair weather is often associated with high pressure

2007-05-12 16:09:28 · answer #3 · answered by NWS Storm Spotter 6 · 0 0

The old professor says: In meteorology we use the term "dead calm" to indicate the temporary lack of advective air motion for a given place. This is not to say the air is not moving at all, for it could well be moving convectively - or up and down. We normally are not aware of this motion. So, when it is dead calm on the surface, vertical air currents could be generating clouds overhead!

Because of temperature and humidity differences with altitude, convection is usually always present even during an inversion.

2007-05-12 10:49:55 · answer #4 · answered by Bruce D 4 · 0 1

it's always blowing somewhere

2007-05-12 08:14:18 · answer #5 · answered by asgspifs 7 · 0 1

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