Geography, asked by abhinavanant5, 7 months ago

It is a seasonal wind. It blows in a fixed direction during a particular season but reverses its direction with the change of seasons.​

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Answered by HarshAditya098
3

Answer:

One of the most commonly recognized seasonal winds are the monsoon winds. Although monsoons are often erroneously identified as rainstorms, they are actually a seasonal wind. A monsoon is a wind in low-latitude climates that seasonally changes direction between winter and summer.Permanent Winds They blow constantly throughout the year in a particular direction. They are trade winds known as westerlies and easterlies.

A monsoon is a seasonal change in the direction of the prevailing, or strongest, winds of a region. Monsoons cause wet and dry seasons throughout much of the tropics. Monsoons are most often associated with the Indian Ocean. Monsoons always blow from cold to warm regions.So when air crosses the equator as it flows from the cold winter hemisphere toward the ITCZ in the summer hemisphere, it experiences a change in the Coriolis force. This causes the trade winds to reverse direction and blow toward the west in the winter hemisphere and to the east in the summer hemisphere.Seasonal winds are movements of air repetitively and predictably driven by changes in large-scale weather patterns. ... Although monsoons are often erroneously identified as rainstorms, they are actually a seasonal wind.

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