by l3p3r » Fri Jul 14, 2006 8:06 am
Hi Matt,
the storms in the tropic that form between 5 and 15 degrees are the result of uneven heating of the earths surface by the sun. Warm moist air from the equator moves south (or north as the case may be), is given a spin by the coriolis force and begins to rise as the ambient air temperature drops further from the equator.
Obviously the coriolis effect will have some sway on the sun, but since it is being heated internally, the mechanism isn't quite the same, so I'd say its just a coincidence
I'd be more inclined to think it was the magnetic field focusing the storms at those latitudes on the sun.
Hi Matt,
the storms in the tropic that form between 5 and 15 degrees are the result of uneven heating of the earths surface by the sun. Warm moist air from the equator moves south (or north as the case may be), is given a spin by the coriolis force and begins to rise as the ambient air temperature drops further from the equator.
Obviously the coriolis effect will have some sway on the sun, but since it is being heated internally, the mechanism isn't quite the same, so I'd say its just a coincidence :)
I'd be more inclined to think it was the magnetic field focusing the storms at those latitudes on the sun.