Anticyclones (High Pressure Weather Phenomenon, Usually Dry Calm Sunny Weather), Reg. DAYRKFSC

Anticyclones, that are weather phenomena, and there is high pressure in the air, over a thousand mibar. And they don't have fronts, like the depressions, and where fronts are coming together, the warmer one is pressed up, and if the warmer front with the air is coming high up, it rains then down; it condensates - the water in it is raining down. That is not in high pressure systems, so there is not so much rainfall, almost not at all. And they are also going clockwise, the depression turns anticlockwise. And so the wind is blowing a little bit from the inside out, and slightly clockwise, in anticyclones. And in the summer they bring warm weather, sunny warm weather, few clouds, that can lead to that that the nights are colder, because there is no cloud cover protecting the air from rising high up, and going away in the night. It can lead to thunderstorms. So then rain; because it is so hot and water with air in it is rising up, and that can then in the afternoon bring thunder. It can lead to drought because it's so warm, especially if it is a blocking height, so that it is like that over longer times. And it can cause then heat stroke, if it's for longer time, and so warm. And it can lead also to fire, if everything is dried out, and then just a spark can ignite a wildfire. And there's also said that some cars or other things, are emitting steams, putting out steams, and that the steams can react with the sunlight, to form ozone, which can be for people with respiratory problems a bit problematic. And in the winter they can bring over longer times, cold, sunny weather, - cold sunny weather. In the nights even colder, but over longer times the same weather, without much change, they are like that; because they are no big front. And that is according to "Geography" by Jane Ferretti and Brian Greasley on the Page 37. The positions and views expressed are the ones of the source and don't necessarily align with my own or with the ones of the entities spoken of.