The Marine Society & Sea Cadets

Our role is to provide personal development opportunities and support in a maritime context for young people and professional seafarers from all the sea services.

Anticyclones

Anticyclones, or highs, are the opposite of depressions – they are areas of high atmospheric pressure that are associated with cool, sinking air. Anticyclones bring settled weather that lasts for days or weeks.

An anticyclone forms when cold air sinks and warms. When air is warming, no clouds can form.

Winds are light and blow out from the centre of the high-pressure cell clockwise.

Characteristics of winter anticyclones

Summer anticyclones bring hot, clear, sunny, settled weather due to:
  • Hot days with few or no clouds – temperatures often reach 25 ºC
  • Light winds
  • Cooling of ground leading to morning dew, which is water vapour on the surface.

Winter anticyclones bring cold, clear, sunny, settled weather due to:
  • Cold, sunny days with few clouds.
  • Temperatures very cold at night due to rapid heat loss because of the lack of cloud cover in the day time.
  • This can bring fog and frost at night or morning dew, which is water vapour on the surface.
The Marine Society & Sea Cadets, 202 Lambeth Road, London SE1 7JW

tel: 020 7654 7000   fax: 020 7928 8914   email: info@ms-sc.org

Patron: HM The Queen
A charity registered in England and Wales 313013 and in Scotland SC037808.