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DOLDRUMS ARE TECHNICALLY known as the inter-tropical convergence zone (ITCZ), the intertropical front, the monsoon trough, or the equatorial convergence zone, the doldrums are a belt of low pressure surrounding the earth at the equator. It is formed by the vertical ascent of warm, moist air from the latitudes above and below the equator. The air is drawn into the ITCZ by the action of the Hadley cell, a macroscale atmospheric feature that is part of the Earths heat and moisture distribution system. It is transported aloft by the convective activity of thunderstorms.

The position of the ITCZ varies throughout the year. Over land, it moves back and forth across the equator following the Sun's zenith. Over the oceans, where the ITCZ is better defined, the seasonal cycle is more subtle, as convection is limited by the relative stability of ocean temperatures. Occasionally, a double ITCZ forms, with one located north and another south of the equator. When this occurs, a narrow ridge of high pressure forms between the two convergence zones, one of which is usually stronger than the other. The location of the ITCZ can have dramatic effects on rainfall in equatorial locations, resulting in wet and dry seasons in the tropics, rather than the cold and warm seasons characteristic of higher latitudes. Regions in the ITCZ receive precipitation more than 200 days per year. Within the ITCZ surface winds are slight, unlike the zones north and south of the equator where the tradewinds blow. For this reason, sailors named this belt of calm the doldrums due to the stagnation they found their sailing ships in after days of no wind, high heat, and humidity.

The ITCZ s role in the formation of tropical storms depends upon the low-level vorticity as one of its six requirements, and the ITCZ trough fills this role as it is a zone of wind change and speed, otherwise known as horizontal wind shear. As the ITCZ migrates more than 500 km. from the equator during the respective hemispheres summer season, increasing Coriolis force makes the formation of tropical storms within this zone more possible. In the north Atlantic and the northeastern Pacific oceans, tropical waves move along the axis of the ITCZ causing an increase in thunderstorm activity, and under weak vertical wind shear, these clusters of thunderstorms can become tropical hurricanes.

Global Warming

The effects of global warming on the ITCZ could be significant. Given that surface winds over the ocean tend to follow ocean currents, changes in the circulation of ocean currents brought about by global warming will also have a direct influence on the ITCZ, resulting in an intensification of precipitation in the ITCZ, according to S. Nawrath and A. Lever-mann. A simulation model of global warming (using a general circulation model, or GCM, with enhanced carbon dioxide, or CO2), indicates an increase in the ITCZ strength and hydrological cycle that accompany global warming, according to U. Cubasch, et al.

A key feature for nearly all GCM simulations of the climate under an enhanced CO2 is that increases of tropospheric water vapor along with a stronger ITCZ and hydrological cycle are required for any substantial global warming, as described by J.T. Houghton, et al, but once they do occur, these conditions create the potential for the development of more powerful storms, according to K.A. Emanuel. The stronger the ITCZ becomes, the more favorable are conditions for the development of major hurricanes in the central Atlantic. In general, global warming will result in an exaggeration of preexisting conditions, whereby wet areas become wetter and dry areas become drier.

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