NY Times explains
Sep. 16th, 2021 01:37 pmhow climate change seems to have caused a slowdown in the speed of storms, allowing them to spend more time in one place. One 2019 study found that the average speed of storms near the Atlantic coast of North America had slowed by more than 15 percent.
Why? Wind speed is partly a function of the difference in temperature between air masses, as Henry Fountain, a Times climate reporter, explained to me. A larger temperature difference leads to faster winds, as the mixing air tries to reach equilibrium. The warming of the Arctic has reduced the temperature difference between it and the Equator, weakening the winds between them, in North America. That weakness, in turn, has slowed the movement of tropical storms.
В порядке опроса, дорогие друзья и френды, скажите пожалуйста - кажется ли вам это объяснение понятным и удовлетворительным? Если нет, то что именно кажется странным.
Why? Wind speed is partly a function of the difference in temperature between air masses, as Henry Fountain, a Times climate reporter, explained to me. A larger temperature difference leads to faster winds, as the mixing air tries to reach equilibrium. The warming of the Arctic has reduced the temperature difference between it and the Equator, weakening the winds between them, in North America. That weakness, in turn, has slowed the movement of tropical storms.
В порядке опроса, дорогие друзья и френды, скажите пожалуйста - кажется ли вам это объяснение понятным и удовлетворительным? Если нет, то что именно кажется странным.