What is the convection pattern between 30°S and 30°N latitude?(1 point)

Responses

Cooler air rises and moves toward the equator, then warms and falls and moves away from the equator.
Cooler air rises and moves toward the equator, then warms and falls and moves away from the equator.

Cooler air rises and moves away from the equator, then warms and falls and moves back to the equator.
Cooler air rises and moves away from the equator, then warms and falls and moves back to the equator.

Hotter air rises and moves away from the equator, then cools and falls and moves back to the equator.
Hotter air rises and moves away from the equator, then cools and falls and moves back to the equator.

Hotter air rises and moves toward the equator, then cools and falls and moves away from the equator.
Hotter air rises and moves toward the equator, then cools and falls and moves away from the equator.

1 answer

The correct response regarding the convection pattern between 30°S and 30°N latitude is:

Hotter air rises and moves toward the equator, then cools and falls and moves away from the equator.

This describes the Hadley Cell circulation, where warm air at the equator rises, moves toward the poles at higher altitudes, cools, and then sinks around 30° latitude before flowing back toward the equator at the surface.