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Pressure systemFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A pressure system is a region of the Earth's atmosphere where air pressure is unusually high or low. High and low pressures develop (and dissipate) constantly due to thermodynamic interactions of temperature differentials in the atmosphere and water of oceans and lakes. Low pressure systemSee also: Low pressure area
Cyclonic properties: in the northern hemisphere, winds around the system move counterclockwise and in the southern hemisphere they move clockwise. Low pressure systems, additionally, often become junctures of fronts. Powerful storms, such as the 1993 North American storm complex and all tropical cyclones, have cyclonic systems. Tornadoes invariantly have very strong local low-pressure systems at their vortices. Low pressure systems are generally formed by air becoming less dense as a result of heating. This is generally the reason for storms and tropical cyclones. The lowest recorded non-tornadic barometric pressure was 869.96 millibars (25.69 inches of mercury), occurred in the Western Pacific during Typhoon Tip on 12 October, 1979. High-pressure systemSee also: High pressure area
High pressure systems occur often, but not always, when there is an uneven heating of the ground, causing the hot air to rise and spread out. This rising air creates an air "void", or a low-pressure system in the area above the ground. However, when the air cools and sinks back down to the ground, a high-pressure system is created. High pressure systems are associated with clear, cool weather. Around high-pressure systems, winds flow clockwise in the northern hemisphere, counterclockwise in the southern hemisphere. In the northern winter high-pressure systems (called Canadian highs or Arctic air masses) often migrate to mid latitude regions such as the North American upper Midwest, New England, and northern Europe. These create cold snaps where unseasonably cold and sunny weather are observed. Cold snaps often follow winter warm spells, where temperatures may be as high as 10°C to 20°C (50-68 °F), and often happen suddenly. The most dramatic Arctic cold snaps, observed in the central regions of North America involve temperature drops of 25°C (45°F) or more in a few hours. Arctic highs, alone, rarely trigger precipitation because of the cloudless weather they produce. However, in combination with other weather-making systems, the cold air they bring can produce massive snowstorms. In summer, low pressure systems come over the north of Australia, bringing cool, rainy weather, while summer brings high pressure systems to the south, meaning warm, dry weather. In winter, high pressure moves to the north of Australia, so the north receives warm, settled weather, while cold fronts sweep to the south of Australia, leaving cold, cloudy, wet weather. |
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