2. The flow of force in a pressure is from high to low pressure. Is there an
instance wherein pressure flows from low pressure to high? If there is any
cite and explain. If none, explain why does it flow from high pressure to low
pressure
Answers
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Explanation:
A low pressure system has lower pressure at its center than the areas around it. Winds blow towards the low pressure, and the air rises in the atmosphere where they meet. As the air rises, the water vapor within it condenses, forming clouds and often precipitation. ... Winds blow away from high pressure.
Answered by
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The flow of force in pressure is from high pressure to low pressure.
Explanation:
- As the atmosphere heats, the warmer air rises which creates an area of lower pressure.
- The colder, denser air forming adjacent high-pressure systems moves to fill in the space left by the rising warmer air.
- The warm air cools when it nears the top of the troposphere and sinks back toward the earth's surface, creating convection currents in the atmosphere.
- High-pressure weather systems typically result from colder air patterns while low-pressure weather systems generally result from warmer air patterns.
- A high-pressure area is a region where the atmospheric pressure at the surface of the planet is greater than its surrounding environment.
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