What is Anabatic Wind?
Local winds that blow from slopes to peaks as a result of the heating of the top slopes without being affected by general pressure changes. Generally, the term is used for upward air currents, vertical movements in the formation of cumulus clouds, and valley breezes rather than anabatic winds. Anabatic winds are less common than katabatic winds, which occur through the opposite process.
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Precipitation in the form of small balls or lumps of ice that form in thunderstorm updrafts and fall to the ground.
A mass of very cold, dry air that mostly originates over the Arctic Ocean.
A strong, downward wind caused by a localized column of air sinking rapidly, often resulting in damage similar to that caused...
The temperature at which air becomes saturated with moisture and water vapor begins to condense into liquid form, leading...
A towering cloud that often reaches great altitudes and is associated with thunderstorms, heavy rain, and sometimes severe...
The situation where there is no advection because the constant pressure surfaces and temperature surfaces in the atmosphere...
A tropical cyclone with sustained winds of at least 74 miles per hour, characterized by a central eye, strong winds, and...
A closed low, also known as a cut-off low, is a low-pressure system that is entirely isolated from the main atmospheric circulation...
Condensation is the process by which water vapor in the air cools and changes into liquid water. This process is crucial...
A fixed potential temperature line on adiabats, or the process of thermodynamic changes within a system without any exchange...

