Page:Popular Science Monthly Volume 76.djvu/458

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454
THE POPULAR SCIENCE MONTHLY

to four or five miles high. The strongest inward component was in the strata cumulus levels about two miles above the ground. Above this level and below it there was a radial inward velocity of a certain value corresponding to each level. There was no clear indication that the inward component in the lower levels reversed to an outward component in the upper levels, and it looked as if the intruding vortex of the lower levels did not succeed in reaching the middle plane where theoretically the outward component begins to develop. It looked as if this vortical system was so stripped of its natural features, by the action of its intrusion into the eastward drift, that only the lower half of the vortex really survived, and that there was an insistent struggle of the rotating cyclone with this eastward drift for the mastery. In a word, the upper sections of the vortex were stripped bare, and they gradually died out at the height of three or four miles within the eastward drift. What remains then is a set of stream lines in the lower levels which have certain features in harmony with the pure vortex system, though only roughly conforming to them, and which in the upper levels is broken down into a very imperfect kind of vortex. It should be said in passing that it is very difficult, on account of the prevailing clouds which occur in the cyclones of the United States, to get satisfactory measures of the cloud motions in the upper levels. Cumulus clouds develop strongly below the one-mile level, and above them it is possible to get the cloud motions in the higher levels only through the more or less occasional rifts in the lower cloud sheets. It is therefore very desirable that an extensive campaign of theodolite measurements of cloud motions in the upper levels of cyclones be instituted, in order to carry out much more fully the details of the discussion which have been suggested in this fundamental research.

Temperature Distribution

Having now described the general and local circulations in the temperate and tropical zones, it is important to make some further remarks regarding the distribution of temperature in those regions, also including the distribution of temperature in the sun itself. The circulations which take place are accompanied by certain changes of temperature in a vertical direction, called temperature gradients, which are characteristic of them. If a cubic centimeter of air at the sea level is lifted up to higher levels, so that it cools simply by the expansion of its own mass, and there is no mixture of warmer or colder air with it from the outside, then the temperature will fall 9.87° Centigrade for every 1,000 meters. Now it is found by balloon observations that the temperature gradients in different regions do not conform to this fundamental rule, which is called the law of adiabatic expansion. In the tropics in the lower levels this rate is very nearly approached, but there