Lecture 3- Ocean basin circulation Flashcards
What types of currents are there?
-warm and cold
What is the direction of winds in southern and northern hemisphere?
-anticlockwise= southern hemisphere -clockwise= northern hemisphere
Which currents do we have to remember?
-Gulf stream -Peru stream -California stream -East Australian stream -Kuroshio stream
How do winds contribute to the creation of ocean currents?
-the currents exist because of the wind, so the currents are dictated by the direction of the wind -wind is always faster than the ocean, thus it is exerting force on the ocean -rotation of high is opposite in the hemispheres -pattern of currents is similar to the patterns of winds
Are the currents geographically influenced?
-yes -oceans are surrounded by land so currents are geographically determined as well -peru current= from the south, travels along the coast of South America thanks to the geogrpahy of the continent -north atlantic= gulf current= warm= iceland has mild winter thanks to that
How does the intensity of light change with latitude?
-when the Sun hits the Earth head on than the light is the most intense, this occurs when the Sun is overhead, the regions where the Sun is high in the sky for longer therefor receive more intense light= more heat, these are primarily the equatorial regions -polar regions on the other hand receive dispersed light that is less intense, thus the poles are less heated
How is the heat imbalance on the surface of the Earth dealt with?
-the equators is warmer and the pole cooler, the energy is transferred via the oceans and atmosphere, the heat imbalance creates winds as the warm air tends to rise and cool air tends to fall
What would happen with the heat imbalance if the Earth didn’t rotate?
-poles would be cooler -equator would be warmer -these differences are smoothed over by the atmosphere and the oceans -the Sun warms up the equatorial region, the hot air rises up and moves towards the poles, it cools on its journey and then descends. The cold air from the poles then travels back to the equator. If the Earth didn’t rotate there would be only two of these systems, one in the northern hemisphere and one in the southern hemisphere
What is the Coriolis effect?
-a deflection of moving objects when they are viewed in a rotating reference frame
What is the Coriolis effect in terms of the Earth surface?
-the Earth rotates, the speed of the surface differs with latitude,it is the fastest at the equator and it is equal to 0 on the poles. -we have a parcel X, it is at a latitude 40S and the speed is about 1181km/h, it travels closer to the equator, if it goes in a straight line due to the faster rotation at the equator it is deflected, as it is in the southern hemisphere it is deflected anticlockwise and goes left, that is why currents in the southern hemisphere always go anticlockwise -it is the opposite in the northern hemisphere, there it is deflected in the clockwise direction thus the currents goes to the right
In what direction is the deflection of winds in the southern hemisphere?
-left, anti-clockwise
In what direction is the deflection of winds in the northern hemisphere?
-right, clockwise
What happens when the Earth rotates?
-the continents plus the 24 hour rotation and the size of the planet mean that there isn’t just one system of the “cooling” mechanism but three in each hemisphere -this is due to fact that as the Earth rotates it takes longer for the winds to reach places so they cool faster
What are the names of the belts?
-Hadley cell=closest to equator Ferrel cell= the middle Polar cell= closest to the pole
What does the number of belts depend on?
-rotation rate and the size of the planet