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1
Q
hurricane formation
A
- evaporation of the sea creates a low pressure area
- low pressure area draws in low level winds close to sea surface
- rising air condenses, releasing latent heart, further driving evaporation, condensation and cloud formation
- cloud formation is not broken up at high altitudes due to low wind shear
- coriolis force creates hurricane vortex
- anticyclone in upper troposphere causes wind to exit and sink and recycle into vortex
2
Q
tornado formation
A
- ground heated by sun creates upward convection, forcing moist air high into the atmosphere
- moist air meets cool dry air causing rapid cooling, creating clouds
- strong wind shear force from opposite direction of convection rotates air
- updraft tilts cylinder of rotating air , tornado touched ground and moves over land
3
Q
monsoon formation
A
- Asian landmass heats up much quicker than the sea during summer
- subtropical jet stream weakens and moves northwards
- tropical easterly jet stream forms and creates high pressure system over the Indian ocean
- moist air flows from high pressure areas over the ocean northwards
- condenses and causes large scale rains over the foothills of the himalayas
4
Q
rain shadow
A
- mountains create a low pressure area
- clouds and rain form windwards side as warm and moist air rises to meet the low pressure area and expands, cooling down
- relative humidity hits 100%, triggering strong rainfall
- non windward side is very dry as the descending air has no moisture left
5
Q
formation of winter storms in the UK
A
- polar front jet stream moves further south in the winter
- jet stream can buckle, forming planetary Rossby waves
- different weather systems occur over the UK as the waves move over
- the jet stream brings intense rainfall
- cold polar air makes it clear and cold (cyclonic)
- warm tropical air makes it warm and humid (anticyclonic)
6
Q
sudden stratospheric warming
A
- in winter a strong polar vortex develops in the stratosphere
- a large pressure difference between this and the jet stream in the troposphere causes a strong jet stream
- the vortex can be stabilised by planetary waves crashing into it from the troposphere
- the collapse of the vortex causes rapid heating in the stratosphere
- east winds burrow down from the stratopshere and weaken the jet stream in the troposphere
- this causes a wavy patter in the jet stream
- this weakens westerly weather systems and increases the chance of northerly and easterly weather systems
7
Q
high plateaux areas
A
- can interfere with jet stream and disrupt atmospheric circulation by forcing air up and over them and deflecting the weather systems around them
- colder than surroundings in winter, creating anti-cyclonic areas of high pressure above them
- warmer than surrounding in summer, creating cyclonic low pressure areas, driving monsoons