Paper IPaper I · Geography

Climatology: Atmosphere and Winds

Composition and layers of the atmosphere with heights, insolation and the heat budget, temperature and lapse rate, the global pressure belts, planetary, seasonal and local winds, the Coriolis force and jet streams, condensation forms and precipitation, and tropical and temperate cyclones

CAPF wiki16 min read23 sections
At a glance
PaperPaper ISubjectGeographySyllabusIndian and World Geography: physical, social and economic aspects of geography pertaining to India and the WorldImportanceHigh
ClimatologyAtmosphereWindsPressure BeltsCyclonesCoriolisJet StreamInsolation

Why this matters for CAPF

Climatology is a high-frequency CAPF area built on clean, memorisable facts: the five atmospheric layers with their heights and what each holds, the heat budget, the seven pressure belts with their latitudes, the three planetary wind systems, the Coriolis force and its rule, a long list of named local winds keyed to regions, and the structure and naming of cyclones by ocean basin. These map cleanly onto single-correct, matching and statement-based questions, and they feed directly into the Indian monsoon and disaster-response topics that the security syllabus cares about. The treatment follows NCERT Class XI Fundamentals of Physical Geography (the atmosphere, insolation and heat budget, atmospheric circulation, water in the atmosphere) and G.C. Leong's Certificate Physical and Human Geography.

Core concept and process

Composition and layers of the atmosphere

By volume dry air is about 78 percent nitrogen, 21 percent oxygen, and small amounts of argon and carbon dioxide; water vapour, dust and ozone vary. Almost all weather, water vapour and dust sit in the lowest layer. The atmosphere is layered by how temperature behaves with height:

  • Troposphere: surface to about 12 km (about 8 km at the poles, about 18 km at the equator). All weather, clouds and water vapour. Temperature falls with height. The boundary above is the tropopause.
  • Stratosphere: about 12 to 50 km. Holds the ozone layer (about 15 to 35 km), which absorbs ultraviolet radiation, so temperature rises with height. It is stable and cloud-free, which is why jet aircraft cruise in the lower stratosphere. Boundary above is the stratopause.
  • Mesosphere: about 50 to 80 km. The coldest layer (down to about minus 90° Celsius near the top); meteors burn up here. Boundary above is the mesopause.
  • Thermosphere: about 80 to 400 km, containing the ionosphere (electrically charged layers that reflect radio waves back to earth, making long-distance radio possible). Aurorae form here. Temperature rises sharply.
  • Exosphere: above about 400 km, extremely rarefied, merging into outer space.

The homosphere (uniform composition, up to about 80 km) and heterosphere (layered gases above) is an alternative compositional split.

Insolation, temperature and lapse rate

Insolation is incoming solar radiation. It is intense at the equator (rays near-vertical, short path through the atmosphere) and weak at the poles (oblique rays, long path), which drives all the heating gradients. The atmosphere is heated chiefly from below, by terrestrial (longwave) radiation off the warmed surface, not directly by the sun, so the troposphere cools upward at the normal lapse rate of about 6.5° Celsius per kilometre. Where this reverses (warm air over cold), it is a temperature inversion, common on calm clear nights and in valleys.

The heat budget balances incoming shortwave solar radiation against outgoing longwave terrestrial radiation, keeping the earth's average temperature stable. The atmosphere is largely transparent to incoming sunlight but absorbs and re-radiates outgoing heat, the greenhouse effect; the tropics receive a surplus and the poles a deficit, and winds and currents redistribute the heat. Temperature distribution is controlled by latitude, altitude, distance from the sea (continentality), ocean currents, prevailing winds, slope and aspect, and cloud cover. Lines joining equal temperature on a map are isotherms.

Pressure and the global pressure belts

Atmospheric pressure falls with altitude. Pressure on a map is shown by isobars. Four pressure belts repeat in each hemisphere, giving seven belts in all:

  • Equatorial low (the doldrums) at the equator: thermally induced; intense heating lifts air, calm surface, heavy convectional rain. This is the rising limb of the Hadley cell and the Inter-Tropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ).
  • Subtropical high (the horse latitudes) at about 30° N and S: dynamically induced; descending dry air gives clear skies and the world's hot deserts.
  • Subpolar low at about 60° N and S: dynamically induced; warm and cold air converge along the polar front, giving rising air and temperate cyclones.
  • Polar high at the poles: thermally induced; intensely cold dense air descends.

The belts shift north in the northern summer and south in the northern winter, following the overhead sun, which drives seasonal wind reversal.

The Coriolis force and the planetary winds

Because the earth rotates, moving air (and water) is deflected: to the right in the Northern Hemisphere and to the left in the Southern Hemisphere. This is Ferrel's law. The deflection is zero at the equator and maximum at the poles. Air flows from high-pressure belts to low-pressure belts as the three permanent (planetary) winds:

  • Trade winds: from the subtropical highs toward the equatorial low; they blow from the north-east in the Northern Hemisphere and the south-east in the Southern (steady, hence "trade").
  • Westerlies: from the subtropical highs toward the subpolar lows; south-westerly in the Northern Hemisphere, north-westerly in the Southern. Over the open Southern Ocean they are fierce, giving the Roaring Forties, Furious Fifties and Shrieking Sixties.
  • Polar easterlies: from the polar highs toward the subpolar lows; cold and dry.

High in the troposphere, narrow fast ribbons of air called jet streams (the subtropical and polar-front jets) steer weather systems; the subtropical westerly jet and its seasonal shift are important for the onset and retreat of the Indian monsoon.

Local and regional winds

Seasonal winds (monsoons) reverse with the season as the pressure belts and land-sea heating shift. Local winds are short-lived and regional, often named, and are a favourite matching question (see table). Sea and land breezes are diurnal: a sea breeze blows from sea to land by day, a land breeze from land to sea by night. Mountain and valley breezes (anabatic up-slope by day, katabatic down-slope by night) work similarly.

Humidity, condensation and precipitation

Evaporation puts water vapour into the air; relative humidity is the percentage of vapour the air holds against its capacity at that temperature. On cooling to the dew point, vapour condenses. Condensation forms include dew, frost, fog, mist and clouds. Clouds are classified by height and form: cirrus (high, wispy), cumulus (heaped, fair-weather), stratus (layered, low), and cumulonimbus (towering thunderstorm cloud, brings heavy rain and hail). Precipitation comes in three types by uplift mechanism: convectional (heating lifts moist air, equatorial afternoons), orographic or relief (air forced up a mountain, wet windward and dry leeward rain-shadow), and cyclonic or frontal (warm air rises over cold along a front).

Air masses and fronts

An air mass is a large body of air uniform in temperature and humidity, named for its source region: continental polar (cP, cold dry), maritime polar (mP, cold moist), continental tropical (cT, hot dry) and maritime tropical (mT, warm moist). Where two contrasting air masses meet, the boundary is a front. A warm front (warm air rising gently over cold) brings widespread, prolonged rain; a cold front (cold air undercutting warm) brings short, heavy, often stormy rain; an occluded front forms when a cold front overtakes a warm one; a stationary front barely moves. The temperate cyclone is the weather system of the polar front, born where polar and tropical air masses clash.

A word on climate classification

Weather is the day-to-day state of the atmosphere; climate is the long-term average (the World Meteorological Organization uses a 30-year normal). Wladimir Koeppen's classification, the standard CAPF reference, groups world climates by temperature and rainfall into five main letters: A (tropical), B (dry), C (warm temperate), D (cold or continental), and E (polar), with sub-letters for the rainfall and temperature pattern. India spans several Koeppen types from Aw (tropical savanna) and BWh (hot desert, the Thar) to Cwg (monsoon with dry winter) and ET (tundra, the high Himalaya). The world climatic zones are treated fully in world physical geography.

Cyclones

A cyclone is a low-pressure system with inward-spiralling winds (anticlockwise in the Northern Hemisphere, clockwise in the Southern); an anticyclone is the opposite, a high-pressure outward-spiralling system.

  • Tropical cyclones form over warm tropical oceans (sea-surface temperature above about 27° Celsius), need the Coriolis force so they form near but not on the equator (Coriolis is zero at the equator), and have a calm low-pressure eye ringed by the violent eyewall. They bring torrential rain, destructive winds and storm surge. They are called cyclones in the Indian Ocean and the South Pacific, hurricanes in the Atlantic and the eastern Pacific, typhoons in the western Pacific, and willy-willies in the older Australian usage.
  • Temperate (extratropical or frontal) cyclones form along the polar front at the subpolar lows where warm and cold air masses meet, are larger and milder, bring widespread steady rain, and travel eastward with the westerlies. They dominate winter weather in the mid-latitudes, and their western-disturbance variant brings winter rain to north-west India.

Static facts to memorise

Layer Extent (approx.) Key feature
Troposphere 0 to about 12 km All weather; temperature falls with height; tropopause above
Stratosphere about 12 to 50 km Ozone layer (15-35 km); stable; jet-aircraft altitude; warms with height
Mesosphere about 50 to 80 km Coldest layer; meteors burn here
Thermosphere (ionosphere) about 80 to 400 km Reflects radio waves; aurorae; very hot
Exosphere above about 400 km Rarefied; merges into space
Pressure belt Latitude Nature / weather
Equatorial low (doldrums) Thermal; rising air; calm; heavy convectional rain; ITCZ
Subtropical high (horse latitudes) about 30° N and S Dynamic; descending dry air; hot deserts
Subpolar low about 60° N and S Dynamic; rising air; polar front; temperate cyclones
Polar high 90° N and S Thermal; cold descending air
Planetary wind Blows from / to Direction and note
Trade winds Subtropical high to equatorial low NE in N Hemisphere, SE in S; steady
Westerlies Subtropical high to subpolar low SW in N, NW in S; Roaring Forties
Polar easterlies Polar high to subpolar low Cold, dry
Monsoon Seasonal reversal Wet summer, dry winter (India)

Local winds (high-yield matching)

Wind Region Type
Loo North India and Pakistan Hot, dry, summer afternoon
Chinook Eastern Rockies (USA, Canada) Warm, dry leeward; "snow eater"
Foehn Northern Alps Warm, dry leeward
Mistral Rhone valley, southern France Cold, dry, north
Sirocco Sahara to the Mediterranean / Italy Hot, dusty (also called khamsin in Egypt)
Harmattan West Africa (off the Sahara) Dry, dusty; "the doctor" (cooling relief)
Bora Adriatic (Croatia) coast Cold, dry, north-east
Pampero Argentine pampas Cold, dry, south-westerly
Brickfielder South-east Australia Hot, dry, dusty
Santa Ana Southern California Hot, dry leeward
Norwester (Kal Baisakhi) Bengal and Assam, India Squally pre-monsoon thunderstorm

Tropical cyclone naming and structure (high-yield)

Basin Name used
North Indian Ocean (Bay of Bengal, Arabian Sea) Cyclone
North-west Pacific Typhoon
North Atlantic and north-east Pacific Hurricane
South Pacific and south-east Indian Ocean Cyclone (formerly willy-willy in Australia)

Tropical cyclone structure from centre outward: the eye (calm, clear, lowest pressure), the eyewall (the ring of strongest winds and heaviest rain), and the spiral rain bands. Conditions needed for formation: warm sea above about 27° Celsius to good depth, high humidity, low vertical wind shear, a pre-existing low-level disturbance, and the Coriolis force (so it forms a few degrees off the equator, not on it).

Climatic extremes worth knowing

Extreme Place
Wettest place (record annual rain) Mawsynram and Cherrapunji, Meghalaya, India
Driest place Atacama Desert, Chile
Hottest recorded Death Valley, USA; Sahara
Coldest recorded Vostok, Antarctica
Highest pressure / clearest skies Subtropical highs (deserts)
Lowest pressure Eye of a tropical cyclone

The two Meghalaya stations owe their rain to orographic uplift of the moist monsoon current against the Khasi hills, a textbook case of relief rainfall that the paper likes to pair with the windward-leeward concept.

Security and strategic-geography angle

Cyclone and disaster response is a standing duty of the central forces: the National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) is raised from CAPF battalions (BSF, CRPF, CISF, ITBP, SSB) and is the lead responder, with the BSF and CRPF assisting evacuation and relief. The Bay of Bengal generates more frequent and deadlier tropical cyclones than the Arabian Sea (a wider, warmer basin with a funnelling coast), striking Odisha, Andhra Pradesh, West Bengal and Tamil Nadu. The Himalayan and high-altitude weather, with blizzards, avalanches and sudden whiteouts, defines the operating environment of the ITBP and the Army on the LAC, where weather has historically taken more lives than the adversary (Siachen). The subtropical jet and the western disturbances also matter, since winter rain and snow on the high passes shape force movement. See oceanography and indian monsoon and climate.

How CAPF asks it

Formats: single-correct on which layer holds ozone, the coldest layer, where aircraft cruise, the normal lapse rate; matching local wind to region, pressure belt to latitude, cyclone name to ocean basin; statement-based assertions on the Coriolis force and cyclone formation; and diagram-labelling of the pressure belts and wind systems.

Authored practice:

Q1The ozone layer that absorbs ultraviolet radiation lies in the:
  1. ATroposphere
  2. BStratosphere
  3. CMesosphere
  4. DThermosphere Answer:
  5. B. Ozone (about 15 to 35 km) absorbs UV and warms the stratosphere with height.
Q2Tropical cyclones do not form exactly on the equator because:
  1. AThe sea is too cold there
  2. BThe Coriolis force is zero at the equator
  3. CPressure is too high there
  4. DThe trade winds are absent there Answer:
  5. B. Without the Coriolis deflection the inward-spiralling circulation cannot organise, so they form a few degrees away.
Q3According to Ferrel's law, winds in the Northern Hemisphere are deflected to their:
  1. ALeft
  2. BRight
  3. CNot deflected
  4. DUpward Answer:
  5. B. Right in the Northern Hemisphere, left in the Southern; deflection is zero at the equator.
Q4Match the wind to its character: the Chinook of the Rocky Mountains is a:
  1. ACold, dry wind
  2. BHot, dusty desert wind
  3. CWarm, dry leeward "snow eater"
  4. DSqually monsoon wind Answer:
  5. C. It descends the leeward Rockies, warming and drying, melting snow.
Q5The coldest atmospheric layer, where meteors burn up, is the:
  1. AStratosphere
  2. BMesosphere
  3. CThermosphere
  4. DExosphere Answer:
  5. B. The mesosphere reaches about minus 90° Celsius near its top.
Q6The trade winds in the Northern Hemisphere blow from the:
  1. ASouth-west
  2. BNorth-east
  3. CNorth-west
  4. DSouth-east Answer:
  5. B. North-easterly in the Northern Hemisphere, south-easterly in the Southern, blowing toward the equatorial low.
Q7The dry, descending air of which pressure belt is responsible for the world's hot deserts?
  1. AEquatorial low
  2. BSubtropical high
  3. CSubpolar low
  4. DPolar high Answer:
  5. B. The dynamically induced subtropical high (about 30°, the horse latitudes) gives clear, dry, descending air.
Q8A tropical storm in the western Pacific is called a:
  1. AHurricane
  2. BCyclone
  3. CTyphoon
  4. DTornado Answer:
  5. C. Typhoon in the west Pacific; hurricane in the Atlantic and east Pacific; cyclone in the Indian Ocean.

Common confusion

  • Troposphere versus stratosphere: weather and falling temperature in the troposphere; ozone and rising temperature in the stratosphere.
  • Coldest layer is the mesosphere, not the thermosphere; the thermosphere is very hot but extremely thin.
  • Tropical versus temperate cyclone: tropical forms over warm tropical seas with an eye and violent winds; temperate forms on the polar front, is larger, milder and travels with the westerlies.
  • Cyclone (low pressure, inward spiral) versus anticyclone (high pressure, outward spiral).
  • Cyclone rotation: anticlockwise in the Northern Hemisphere, clockwise in the Southern.
  • Cyclone, hurricane and typhoon are the same storm named by basin.
  • Loo is hot and dry (North India summer); Mistral and Bora are cold and dry.
  • Subtropical high (30°) is dynamic and brings deserts; equatorial low and polar high are thermal.
  • Windward (wet) versus leeward (dry rain shadow) in orographic rain.

Memory hook

  • Layers low to high: "The Strong Man Took Exercise" = Troposphere, Stratosphere, Mesosphere, Thermosphere, Exosphere.
  • Pressure belts: "Every Sailor Sees Polar" = Equatorial low, Subtropical high, Subpolar low, Polar high.
  • Coriolis: "Right is Right in the North" (Northern Hemisphere deflects right).
  • Storm names by basin: "Cyclone east of India, Typhoon in the western Pacific, Hurricane in the Atlantic".
  • Cold local winds (Mistral, Bora, Pampero) versus hot (Loo, Sirocco, Harmattan, Chinook).

Night before

  • Layers: troposphere, stratosphere (ozone), mesosphere (coldest, meteors), thermosphere (ionosphere, radio), exosphere.
  • Normal lapse rate about 6.5° Celsius per kilometre; inversion is the reverse.
  • Seven pressure belts; subtropical high (30°) is dynamic and gives the hot deserts.
  • Coriolis deflects right in the north, left in the south, zero at the equator (Ferrel's law).
  • Trades blow toward the equator; westerlies poleward to 60°; polar easterlies toward 60°.
  • Tropical cyclones need sea above about 27° and the Coriolis force; not on the equator; eye and eyewall.
  • Cyclone (Indian Ocean), hurricane (Atlantic and east Pacific), typhoon (west Pacific).
  • Temperate cyclones form on the polar front and move with the westerlies.
  • Loo and Sirocco hot; Mistral and Bora cold; Chinook and Foehn warm leeward.

One-line recall

  • Air is about 78 percent nitrogen and 21 percent oxygen; weather and water vapour sit in the troposphere.
  • The atmosphere is heated from below by terrestrial radiation; the troposphere cools upward at about 6.5° Celsius per kilometre.
  • Ozone is in the stratosphere; the mesosphere is the coldest layer; meteors burn in the mesosphere; the ionosphere reflects radio waves.
  • Aircraft cruise in the stable, cloud-free lower stratosphere.
  • The heat budget balances incoming shortwave with outgoing longwave radiation; isotherms join equal temperature, isobars join equal pressure.
  • Seven pressure belts: equatorial low, two subtropical highs, two subpolar lows, two polar highs.
  • Equatorial low and polar high are thermal; subtropical high and subpolar low are dynamic.
  • The subtropical highs (horse latitudes, 30°) sit over the world's hot deserts.
  • The pressure belts shift north in the northern summer, south in the northern winter, driving seasonal winds.
  • Coriolis deflects winds right in the Northern Hemisphere, left in the Southern; zero at the equator.
  • Trades are north-easterly (north) and south-easterly (south); westerlies are south-westerly (north); the Southern Ocean has the Roaring Forties.
  • Jet streams steer weather and influence the monsoon onset and retreat.
  • Precipitation is convectional, orographic (windward wet, leeward dry) or cyclonic.
  • Tropical cyclones need sea above about 27° and never form exactly on the equator; they have an eye and an eyewall.
  • Cyclone (Indian Ocean), hurricane (Atlantic and east Pacific), typhoon (west Pacific), willy-willy (old Australian usage).
  • Temperate cyclones form on the polar front and travel eastward with the westerlies.
  • Loo (North India, hot), Chinook (Rockies, warm leeward), Mistral and Bora (cold), Sirocco and Harmattan (hot, dusty).
  • The Bay of Bengal generates more and deadlier cyclones than the Arabian Sea.

Glossary

  • Insolation: incoming solar radiation reaching the earth.
  • Lapse rate: the rate at which temperature falls with height (normal about 6.5° Celsius per kilometre).
  • Temperature inversion: warm air lying over cold air, reversing the normal lapse.
  • Heat budget: the balance of incoming and outgoing radiation that keeps earth's temperature steady.
  • Greenhouse effect: trapping of outgoing longwave heat by atmospheric gases.
  • Isotherm / isobar: lines of equal temperature / equal pressure on a map.
  • Pressure belt: a latitudinal zone of high or low pressure (seven worldwide).
  • ITCZ: the Inter-Tropical Convergence Zone, the rising-air belt at the equatorial low.
  • Coriolis force: apparent deflection of moving air and water due to earth's rotation (Ferrel's law).
  • Trade winds / westerlies / polar easterlies: the three planetary wind systems.
  • Jet stream: a narrow, fast, high-altitude band of wind that steers weather.
  • Doldrums / horse latitudes: belts of calm at the equatorial low and the subtropical high.
  • Monsoon: a seasonally reversing wind system.
  • Relative humidity: vapour content as a percentage of capacity at that temperature.
  • Dew point: the temperature at which air becomes saturated and vapour condenses.
  • Orographic rain: rain caused by air forced to rise over a mountain barrier.
  • Rain shadow: the dry leeward side of a mountain.
  • Eye and eyewall: the calm centre and the violent inner ring of a tropical cyclone.
  • Anticyclone: a high-pressure system with outward-spiralling, descending air.
  • Western disturbance: a winter extratropical low that brings rain and snow to north-west India.
Now reinforce it
Drill this with a practice set.
Go to practice
← BackAll of Paper I