Q. 5. How does a high pressure belt get formed
near 30° parallel? Why does this region
have hot deserts?
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The pressure belt forms around 300 parallel because of various reasons. The different pressure belts are equatorial low, sub tropical highs, sub polar lows and polar highs. Some of the region manages the hot desert because of the sun ray fall. The air is dry and warm because of most of the desert present on the wind.
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- As it moves towards the mid-latitudes on both sides of the equator, the air cools and sinks. The resulting air mass subsidence creates a subtropical ridge of high pressure near the 30th parallel in both hemispheres. ... Many of the world's deserts are caused by these climatological high-pressure areas.
- The hot deserts of the world are located between 15° and 30° north or south of the equator. This is a zone of subsiding or sinking air. Air that rises due to the intense heat at the equator divides to flow north and south. When it reaches 15° to 30° it begins to sink because it has lost so much of its heat
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