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So the paper I posted was wrong. Big whoop.
It is a *big whoop* if you are trying to make a point. http://www.npmoc.navy.mil/jtwc/satshots/sh1806sair.jpg This looks like a tropical cyclone in the s. hemisphere off the northeast coast of Australia - is that right? Nice picture. In any case, it is seen spinning clockwise at the surface, just what one would expect s. of the equator. At higher altitudes, cloud moisture is often seen spinning off in the anticyclonic direction (direction opposite the spin of the surface cyclone) for it's respective hemisphere - but that's because the outflow up high represents a high pressure area (which is naturally anticyclonic) as opposed to the surface low of the storm. Bruce Jensen |
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