. attempt to explain equatorial weatuer oy means of concepts; developed from the study of the weather in Northwest surope -- in other words, | by frontal and. air mass concepts =~ and trezst equatorial research as a department ofHetecrology witn problems of its own, requiring special observations and methods of solution. Of these metiocs the analysis of the velocity field stands out as the most useful at the present tie, because it nas been the most neglected. we _ must, of course, consider also the relation of the wind field to the fields of pressure, of temperature, and of composition (weather). eTereeeare som Ww! tegemeeee ie. hes Nate wt ree ce etter | etter te oe penne meen, re The researches I have described, in fact, raisy more proble.as tnan they solve, wiicn is a promising sign for tne future. Secondly, the "fronts" of the equatorial regions, now receive an unequivocal Kineuwatic definition -- they are asymptotes of convergence in the streamline field. in the early stages of wave development, they are absent or weak. They develop in intensity as the wave becomes unstable and ure most marxea when the definitive vortex is formed. in other words the equatorial front, or fronts, considered as synoptic entities do not precede the formation. is obvious. The influence of this principle on forecasting Thirdly, the "equatorial front"in tns sense I have described, is continuous only where one has 4 continuous series of vortices such as occurs westward from Guam during the wet season. Hlsewhnere it appears and disappears witna the varying nistory of the equatorial waves, in a manner entirely familiar to equatorial forecasters, -_T 34 9001628 oy

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