Michele Combs

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When warm air rises, it relieves the pressure of the air beneath it and so creates an area of low pressure. But if that same rising air mass cools, then it sinks and presses down on the air below it to create an area of high pressure. Because the atmosphere is always trying to keep itself in balance, and because low-pressure systems are actually partial vacuums, air moves from high-pressure systems to areas of low pressure, producing wind.
Weather 101: From Doppler Radar and Long-Range Forecasts to the Polar Vortex and Climate Change, Everything You Need to Know about the Study of Weather (Adams 101 Series)
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