Coreolis affect
yus
Although the coriolis effect affects the 2 hemispheres by making them move in a circular motion. It affect the northern hemisphere by making it move in a right circular motion and the southern the other way.
In the southern hemisphere, the Coriolis effect does influence the rotation of large-scale weather patterns, but it is too weak to affect the direction in which a toilet flushes. The direction a toilet flushes is primarily determined by the design of the toilet and the angle of the water jets.
it hurt the houses
hjj
Be aware that Latin America includes Mexico, Central America, the Caribbean and South America. This means the whole region spans two hemispheres. With that being said, the hemispheres don't affect the climate at all. It however, reverses the seasons for those countries located on the southern Hemisphere, such as Brazil, Chile or Argentina. For example, when it is Summer in the northern hemisphere, the southern hemisphere is having its Winter season.
Currents don't affect the Coriolis Effect, the Coriolis Effect is the one who affects the currents. Currents in the Northern Hemisphere bend to the left and currents in the Southern Hemisphere bend to the right.
it absorbs it and the water in the deep outmatches it and makes it cooler still
it absorbs it and the water in the deep outmatches it and makes it cooler still
Yes - a cyclone is a Southern hemisphere word for what is usually called a hurricane in the Northern hemisphere. Cyclones are the same thing as hurricanes, and for that matter, as tropical storms and typhoons too, but it's important to know that whilst they all mean the same kind of weather event, the word 'cyclone' originates from the Southern hemisphere. A cyclone is an appropriate name for such an event in the Southern hemisphere (eg Cyclone Nargis that hit Myanmar) because here, the weather system rotates clockwise. For us and my students in the UK in the Northern hemisphere, however, it sounds counter intuitive to call these systems cyclones because in the Northern hemisphere they rotate anti-clockwise and so they are traditionally known as hurricanes (eg Hurricane Katrina that hit the US). The rotation is caused by the earth's spin, known as the 'coriolis effect', which causes the airflow patterns to be affected, with the direction of rotation being determined by whichever hemisphere the hurricane spawns in.
The Coriolis effect would cause the winds to be deflected to the east in the Northern Hemisphere and to the west in the Southern Hemisphere as they move from the equator towards the poles. This deflection is a result of the Earth's rotation and leads to the creation of the westerlies in both hemispheres.