Good weather is usually associate with a high pressure system, which rotates clockwise in the northern hemisphere.
CORRECTION FROM MADDIE:NO! Good weather rotates COUNTER -clockswise!I had other sources! smh.
in the northern hemisphere a high-pressure system rotates in a clockwise direction. a low pressure system in the northern hemisphere rotates in a counterclock-wise direction.
Low pressure areas will spin in a clockwise direction in the Southern Hemisphere. This is the opposite to the Northern hemisphere.
Storm in the northern hemisphere rotate counterclockwise except for a very small percentage of tornadoes and an even smaller percentage of supercells which rotate clockwise.
Anticlockwise
Clockwise
A low pressure system in the northern hemisphere rotates counter-clockwise.
Clockwise in the northern hemisphere and counterclockwise in the southern hemisphere, and always diverging away from the center.
Counter clockwise and towards the center
It moves to the right YOUR WELCOME :)
The wind in a cyclone flows inward and upward in a counterclockwise direction in the Northern Hemisphere and clockwise in the Southern Hemisphere. This upward flow is due to the low pressure at the center of the cyclone, which causes air to rise and create a cyclonic circulation.
Winds in a northern hemisphere low pressure system rotate counterclockwise around the low pressure center.
A low pressure system in the northern hemisphere rotates counter-clockwise.
Clockwise in the northern hemisphere and counterclockwise in the southern hemisphere, and always diverging away from the center.
Counter clockwise and towards the center
It moves to the right YOUR WELCOME :)
In the northern hemisphere, winds associated with a high-pressure system blow clockwise towards the center.
The northern hemisphere is one of the parts that has the low pressure centre in the northern part of the country.
The center of the Northern hemisphere is found in Colorado
The center of the Northern Hemisphere is the North Pole.
clockwise and out from the center in the northern hemisphere, counterclockwise in the southern hemisphere.
The wind in a cyclone flows inward and upward in a counterclockwise direction in the Northern Hemisphere and clockwise in the Southern Hemisphere. This upward flow is due to the low pressure at the center of the cyclone, which causes air to rise and create a cyclonic circulation.
clockwise away from the high-pressure center