Page:Popular Science Monthly Volume 76.djvu/457

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CIRCULATION OF THE ATMOSPHERE
453

circulating on practically the same vortical laws, but unfortunately it shows indications of not being able to follow the law strictly, especially in the inner portions of it. The outer part of a strong ocean cyclone, where the barometer drops to 28 inches of pressure at the center, is very much like an enormous hurricane in its formation, but near the center the angles and the velocities begin to break away from the pure vortex law. This is probably due to the great extent of the wind areas, and consequently the congestion, and to the fact that the ocean cyclone is not deep enough, although it may be 3 or 4 miles high, to carry out fully the requirements of so large a vortex of a pure type. It is known that hurricanes are vortices which are 6 or 7 miles deep. The large ocean cyclone is probably not more than 4 miles deep, and the great land cyclone is rarely more than 2 or 3 miles deep.

The land cyclones in the United States conform to the pure vortex law less perfectly than does the ocean cyclone. The pressure in the land cyclone usually stops at about 29 inches near the center. Its depth is usually about 2 or 3 miles. It may cover a diameter of 2,000 miles. These dimensions are evidently unfavorable for the development of a pure vortex. Furthermore, the distribution of the temperature in the land cyclone is entirely different from that in the pure hurricane, and this too prevents the land cyclone from developing according to the perfect law. Furthermore, the cyclones of the temperate zone develop in the lower levels of the great eastward drift. In these lower levels the eastward velocity of the drift is not very high; something like ten meters per second. At the height of two or three miles the eastward drift is something like twenty to forty meters per second. It becomes evident, then, that a vortex which develops in the lower levels, from any set of causes, must lift its head into a rapidly flowing stream of air, and this necessarily will tend to break down the intruding head by stripping off portions of it and detaching the upper portions of the vortex from the lower portions. Now a vortex can not develop except as a complete individual. If it is intruded upon by cutting off the lower section, as in the hurricane over the ocean, or by the upper sections thrusting themselves into the stream of the rapidly flowing eastward drift, it is evident that this is a sufficient cause for the partial destruction of the vortex system. In the theoretical vortex, above the middle section, the wind has an outward component increasing with the height, as already explained. Below this section it has in every cyclone an inward component. Now as a result of the cloud observations which were undertaken by the U. S. Weather Bureau during the international cloud year 1896–7, in which between 6,000 and 7,000 observations were made by means of theodolites upon the direction of motion in the different cloud levels, it was found that there was an inward component over the cyclones in all levels from the ground up