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The Jet Stream
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 January 2010
Extract
For many years there has been evidence (for instance from pilot balloon ascents and drift of cirrus clouds) of the existence of occasional very strong winds in the upper troposphere. However, it was not until about 1933, that Bjerknes, who had introduced the concept of the polar front during the first world war, produced a map of geostrophic wind deduced from upper-air temperature soundings made at a few scattered stations and showed a core of strong westerly winds at about 12 kilometres in middle latitudes in winter. No further progress was made until during the second world war when a comparatively large number of upper-air stations were set up and it was found that narrow belts of very strong winds were almost always present over some part of the Earth's surface in the 30,000/40,000 ft. altitude band. In 1944–5 American bombers encountered some rather frightening winds over the Japan area and since that time some extensive investigations of jet streams have taken place.
The term jet stream is popularly applied to any strong upper-wind current (of say 80–90 knots) and it is safe to assume that such winds are in fact associated with a jet stream, which may be considered as a narrow tube containing very strong winds embedded in the surrounding atmosphere.
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- Copyright © The Royal Institute of Navigation 1959
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