TYPES OF WINDS

I. Planetary winds:
Planetary
 winds are major component of the general global circulation of air. 
These are known as planetary winds because of their prevalence in the 
global scale throughout the year. Planetary winds occur due to 
temperature and pressure variance throughout the world.
The planetary winds are discussed below:
(a) Trade wind

Winds blowing from the Subtropical High 
Pressure Belt or horse latitudes towards the Equatorial Low Pressure 
Belt or the ITCZ are the trade winds. In the Northern Hemisphere, the 
trade winds blow from the northeast and are known as the Northeast Trade
 Winds; in the Southern Hemisphere, the winds blow from the southeast 
and are called the Southeast Trade Winds. The weather conditions 
throughout the tropical zone remain more or less uniform. This belt is 
subjected to seasonal variation due to northward and southward movement 
of sun. The equatorward part of the trade wind are humid because they 
are characterized by atmospheric instability thus causes heavy 
precipitation.
(b) Westerly Wind
The Westerlies are the prevailing winds in
 the middle latitudes between 35º and 65º latitude, blowing from the 
high pressure area in the Sub Tropical High Pressure Belt i.e. horse 
latitudes towards the sub polar low pressure belt. The winds are 
predominantly from the south-west to north-east in the Northern 
Hemisphere and from the north-west to south-east in the Southern 
Hemisphere. The Westerlies are strongest in the winter season and times 
when the pressure is lower over the poles, while they are weakest in the
 summer season and when pressures are higher over the poles. The 
Westerlies are particularly strong, especially in the Southern 
Hemisphere, as there is less land in the middle latitudes to obstruct 
the flow. The Westerlies play an important role in carrying the warm, 
equatorial waters and winds to the western coasts of continents, 
especially in the Southern Hemisphere because of its vast oceanic 
expanse.
(c) Polar Wind
The winds blowing in the Arctic and the 
Antarctic latitudes are known as the Polar Winds. They have been termed 
the 'Polar Easterlies', as they blow from the Polar High Pressure belt 
towards the Sub-Polar Low-Pressure Belts. In the Northern Hemisphere, 
they blow in general from the north-east, and are called the North-East 
Polar Winds and in the Southern Hemisphere, they blow from the 
south-east and are called the South- East Polar Winds. As these winds 
blow from the ice-capped landmass, they are extremely cold. They are 
more regular in the Southern Hemisphere than in the Northern Hemisphere.
 


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