How to prove that the movement of the winds of the planet Earth is towards the North Pole or the South Pole? And how do climatologists respond?
as you know :
The magnetic attraction force increases in the frontal part of meteorites and planets.
It leads to the accumulation of matter, so the mass of the planet increases in the direction
There is a moving front and, on the other hand, the accumulation and mass has been reduced in the rear
The part of the planet that results in reduced gravity. Therefore, any observation of greater gravitational force means that the planet is moving in this direction, and it has been proven that the greatest attraction is at the North Pole, i.e. at . The planet moves in a direction from the South Pole to the North Pole
James Gray added a reply
Chartered Physicist, PhD Director of Design and Development at Red Core Consulting ltd.
Vancouver, Canada:
There is no such polar movement of wind.
We can show that at high latitudes, air does not flow uniformly poleward (how is that possible if air sinks?)
The magnetic properties or other properties of meteorites have nothing to do with this issue.
>This planet moves in a direction from the South Pole to the North Pole
It is not true.
The Earth rotates on its axis - and orbits the Sun in an elliptical path. The earth does not and cannot move perpendicular to the plane of that path.
Michael John Patrick added a reply
Alumni of the University of Washington, Seattle
United States:
"What do you mean by 'winds'? Earth's atmosphere has various stable structures at different scales from the global circulation (https://www.noaa.gov/jetstream/global/global-atmospheric-circulations) to very small microclimates in a River valleys are special - each governed by different physics and thermodynamics. The "wind" is actually somewhat of a side effect, the circulation of fluid mass tangential to the slope between high and low pressure areas.
As for mass gain, "48.5 tons (44 tons or 44,000 kg) of meteorite material falls to Earth every day" (https://science.nasa.gov/solar-system/meteors-meteorites/) and due to Earth's rotation which spreads relatively evenly on the surface during a day. Furthermore, any increase in mass will increase gravity, not decrease it. And the magnetic field vector is almost vertical at the poles, the earth (planet) itself is a "magnet", so the field is more or less symmetrical, so why should it move "towards" the north pole?
There is a great image at https://earth.nullschool.net/#current/wind/isobaric/700hPa/orthographic=57.78,35.19,1946, you can see the different wind patterns at different pressure scales and altitudes for the local area view Explore for yourself. . Attached is a high level snapshot.