Hello all! I just got one of those incredible "hunches" that all
tramway/streetcar drivers get at times. The subject of carousel
vs. merry-go-round rotational direction seems to be wrought with
controversy.
The same thing seems to apply to whirlpools. In a "popular science
book" I found an illustration of a northern hemisphere whirlpool
(rotating anti-clockwise, I think) and a southern hemisphere (rotating
clockwise), but in any case rotating in the opposite direction).
But is this really true?
Best regards
Christofer Noering
Stockholm
[ Satellite images of weather systems offer proof of the statement.
[ A cyclone is a violent system, often of vast extent, characterized
[ by high winds rotating about a calm center of low atmospheric
[ pressure. A typhoon (the word originates from both Arabic and
[ Cantonese) is a tropical cyclone whirling in the western Pacific
[ or Indian oceans; a hurricane is the same storm but in the Atlantic
[ or Caribbean. When the vertical motion is more significant than
[ the horizontal motion, the storm is called a tornado or waterspout.
[ (Ref. Merriam's Dictionary, 1927.) -- Robbie
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