Environmental Sciences, asked by DesiNakhre, 11 months ago

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❇ What are Hadley Cells??

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Answered by hayanafathima140
3

Answer:

The Hadley cell, named after George Hadley, is a global scale tropical atmospheric circulation that features air rising near the Equator, flowing poleward at a height of 10 to 15 kilometers above the earth's surface, descending in the subtropics, and then returning equatorward near the surface. This circulation creates the trade winds, tropical rain-belts and hurricanes, subtropical deserts and the jet streams. Hadley cells are the low-altitude overtuning circulation that have air sinking at roughly zero to 30 degree latitude.

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Answered by Anonymous
27

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WHAT ARE HADLEY CELLS?!

The lack of desert rain results partly from a pattern of air circulation described by George Hadley in 1735. In an effort to explain the direction of the trade winds, Hadley conjectured that air around the Equator will constantly rise and move toward the Poles as it warms, and then will move back toward the Equator as it cools and falls, creating areas, cells, where air temperature and pressure are quite constant.

Hadley's theory does not work on a global scale, however Hadley cells do help explain atmospheric patterns around the Equator. Many of the world's deserts lie at the outer edge of these cells, beneath areas of dry air that have disgorged their moisture over tropical and subtropical forests.

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