The Earth may no longer have wind and rain

It is a new hypothesis after scientists find the answer to the question: What creates the wind?

Picture 1 of The Earth may no longer have wind and rain
The steamy forest is creating a storm.

We all know that the temperature difference is the source of the wind: Hot air rises and is replaced by colder air.

But what happens if the wind is not created that way and is largely formed from the amount of water vapor in the air?

Rainforests are places that generate large amounts of moisture in the air thanks to the process of evaporating water or escaping from trees.

Physicists and forest defenders support the new hypothesis that if the forests are cut down, the Earth will lose both the wind and the rain they carry.

When water vapor condenses into water droplets, the air pressure around it decreases as the density of steam decreases while the volume is constant. The surrounding air moves in. This movement creates wind.

Science has shown forests to regenerate rain through evaporation and evaporation. But this is the first hypothesis that shows that the regeneration process also creates wind. These winds, then bring the ocean air to the continents.

If this hypothesis is still controversial, the impact of the loss of rainforests will be immense.

According to the usual hypothesis, if the forests are lost, the rainfall in the continental areas far from the sea will be reduced by 10 to 30%. But according to this hypothesis, rainfall will drop to 90% or even more.

However, this hypothesis also suggests that if forests are replanted, the amount of wind generated by regenerating forests is likely to bring rain to the most arid areas.

6000 years ago, the Sahara desert used to be a luxuriant and humid land. If so, as Albert Eistein once said, nothing is impossible.