Earth warming will reduce the intensity of storms?
Going against most of the previous views, Gabriel Vecchi, an oceanographer working at a laboratory for geophysical kinetic currents in the US, concluded that global warming is This may cause fluctuations in wind direction and wind intensity, and this will reduce the intensity of future storms.
Previous predictive models suggest that rising ocean surface temperatures are the factors that form storms. Therefore, rising temperatures will make storms more devastating.
However, according to Dr. Gabriel Vecchi, rising temperatures will also cause strong fluctuations in wind direction and wind intensity, which will inhibit the formation of major storms; but fluctuations in wind direction and wind intensity are not a separate phenomenon, but must also be placed in the context of a hotter world, storm activity will also increase.
According to the VNA, at the moment, scientists do not know how these two factors will work together. They are also interested in studying the connection between the Atlantic wind and the Pacific wind, which is a factor affecting global weather. Research results show that as the temperature rises, the wind circulating in the Pacific atmosphere slows down and may increase fluctuations in wind direction and wind intensity in this area, which scientists have supposedly there will be a great impact on the storm phenomenon.
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