raindrops |
If we were to put that question to someone who knows a low pressure system from a hole in the ground, we might learn that air moves toward a low-pressure cell and rises. Heck, you can learn that from myriad sources. You'll also learn that the rising air cools and cooler air can't hold as much water vapor, which is the main reason for precipitation around low-pressure cells. You're unlikely, however, to find a knowledgeable person who couches the explanation in the same terms as Morgan:
"High and low pressure readings are an indicator of how much weight the atmosphere is pushing down on a particular area. When the pressure is low, the air is free to rise into the atmosphere where it cools and condenses. This condensation forms clouds made of water droplets and ice crystals around dust particles in the sky. "We mention that knowledgeable folks won't say it that way, because it's partially stupid and partially wrong. To say that "High and low pressure [depends on] how much weight the atmosphere is pushing down on a particular area..." is sophomoric: atmospheric pressure is a measure of the mass of the air above a point in the surface. Stating that "the air is free to rise into the atmosphere" makes no sense at all, because the air IS the atmosphere! And last, the air doesn't condense, the water vapor in the air condenses -- Lee might know that if he weren't confusing condensation in the atmosphere with condensed milk... |
OK, so he's said that: but given that DMS requires a minimum word count, what is Morgan to do? Why, explain the "Causes of Low Pressure," of course!
"The main cause of the differences in pressure around the world is the sun. Because of the rotation and shape of the earth and the rising and setting of the sun, temperatures are different around the world. Difference in temperature affect the amount of pressure..."
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SI - WEATHER
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