Heat piling up at the equator and cold sinking at the poles set up giant belts of high and low pressure — and the spinning Earth bends the resulting winds into curved paths.
- Intense heating near the equator makes warm air rise (low-pressure belt); it sinks around 30° N and S, forming sub-tropical high-pressure belts .
- Air rising again near 60° makes sub-polar low-pressure belts, while very cold sinking air at the poles forms polar high-pressure belts — setting up circulation cells.
- The Earth’s rotation deflects these winds — to the right in the Northern Hemisphere and to the left in the Southern — so planetary winds follow curved paths.