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12: Atmospheric Circulation

  • Page ID
    31578
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    With a wingspan reaching 11 feet, the albatross can glide across thousands of miles of ocean without ever flapping. In flight they reach speeds of over 70 miles per hour and remain in the air for 20 hours or more. The distances they cover are epic. One tagged albatross completed a circumnavigation of Antarctica—a journey of more than 16,000 miles—in just 46 days. The albatross achieves these long flights because its slender, glider-like wings lock in place like snap-together tent poles and enable it to fly without moving a muscle. The albatross’s heart rate while flying barely exceeds its resting heart rate. This bird is a marvel of evolutionary engineering and a paragon of energy-efficient flight.

    The albatross can teach us a good deal, and so we take to the air on the wings of an albatross in our exploration of winds, those great currents of air that sweep our globe. Modern technology permits us to tag along and experience the flight of these great birds. Albatross cams have captured these birds gliding across the ocean, soaring next to icebergs, and following killer whales—presumably while they’re hunting, an activity at which the killer whale excels. But we are going to follow an imaginary albatross, a robotic one we’ll call a robotross. Though an actual robotross doesn’t yet exist, engineers are very keen to build one to carry out long-lasting, energy-efficient flights. Because ours is imaginary, it may disobey a few engineering limitations and laws of physics. Our robotross does whatever we ask it to do.

    In our robotross trek around the globe, we will explore meteorology, the study of the atmosphere. We’ll soar to the very top of the atmosphere and from the equator to the poles. This global flight will introduce us to the structure of Earth’s atmosphere and the global wind patterns. With these basic concepts, we can better understand the nature of global shifts in Earth’s winds, such as those that occur during cycles of El Niño and La Niña, and one of the most powerful forces of nature on the planet—hurricanes. We’ll use this knowledge in future chapters to understand currents and waves.


    This page titled 12: Atmospheric Circulation is shared under a CC BY 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by W. Sean Chamberlin, Nicki Shaw, and Martha Rich (Blue Planet Publishing) via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.