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Winds and Monsoons

🎓 Class 8 Science CBSE Theory Ch 6 — Combustion and Flame ⏱ ~29 min
🌐 Language: [gtranslate]

This MCQ module is based on: Winds and Monsoons

[myaischool_lt_science_assessment grade_level="class_8" science_domain="chemistry" difficulty="basic"]

6.4 High-Speed Winds & Low Pressure

In Part 1 we saw that air pushes on surfaces with a pressure of about 105 Pa. But here is a wonderful twist: when air is moving fast, the pressure it exerts drops. Moving air pushes less than still air! This surprising rule is behind airplanes, paint sprays, and the way cricket balls swing.

🔬 Activity 6.6 — The Two-Balloon SurpriseL3 Apply
🤔 Predict first: Hang two balloons close together but not touching. If you blow air between them, will they move apart or come closer?
  1. Blow up two balloons of similar size.
  2. Tie each with a thread. Hang them from a support so they are side-by-side with a gap of 3–4 cm between them.
  3. Using a straw, blow a strong stream of air into the gap between them.
  4. Watch carefully!
Surprise! Instead of flying apart, the balloons come together!
Why? Your breath makes the air between the balloons move fast — and fast-moving air has lower pressure. The slower, still air on the outer sides has higher pressure and therefore pushes each balloon inward, towards the other. This is a simple demonstration of Bernoulli's Principle.
Fast air between → low pressure → balloons come together fast air = LOW P still air HIGH P still air HIGH P
Fig 6.5 — High-speed air in the gap has lower pressure; higher still-air pressure on the outer sides pushes the balloons together.

Everyday Applications

✈️
Airplane wings (aerofoil)
Air flows faster over the curved top of the wing than under the flat bottom. Lower pressure above + higher pressure below = upward lift.
🧴
Atomiser / perfume spray
Squeezing the bulb shoots air fast across the top of a dip-tube. Low pressure at the top sucks perfume up and sprays it as a fine mist.
🎨
Paint spray guns
Same atomiser idea — compressed air rushing past the nozzle creates low pressure that draws paint up and sprays it.

Winds Are Caused by Pressure Differences

Now imagine two regions of the atmosphere side by side: one at high pressure, the other at low pressure. Air is a fluid, and fluids always flow from a region of higher pressure to a region of lower pressure. This flow of air from high-pressure to low-pressure regions is what we call a wind.

Rule of thumb: Air moves from high pressure → low pressure. The greater the pressure difference, the faster the wind.

So whenever two places in the atmosphere have different pressures, a wind blows between them. What causes these pressure differences in the first place? The main reason is unequal heating of the Earth by the Sun. Hot air rises (it is lighter), creating a low-pressure region. Cooler, denser air from nearby rushes in to take its place — a wind is born.

6.5 Sea Breeze and Land Breeze

If you have ever sat on a beach in Mumbai or Chennai, you may have noticed a cool breeze during the day and a different, warmer breeze at night. That difference is not your imagination — it is a daily reversal of wind direction called the sea–land breeze cycle.

Day: the Sea Breeze

The Sun warms both land and sea, but land heats up faster than water. By afternoon, the air above the land is much warmer. This hot air rises, leaving a low-pressure region over the land. Meanwhile, the cooler, denser air above the sea has higher pressure. Air rushes from the sea towards the land. This cool wind blowing from sea to land during the day is the sea breeze. Coastal people look forward to it as a natural daytime air-conditioner!

Night: the Land Breeze

After sunset, the land cools faster than the sea (water retains heat much longer). Now the sea is warmer than the land. Air above the sea rises, creating a low-pressure region there. Cooler air from the land flows out towards the sea. This night-time wind blowing from land to sea is the land breeze. Fishermen often set out at night, using this breeze to carry their boats out to sea.

Sea Breeze (Day) vs Land Breeze (Night) DAY LOW P HIGH P Sea Breeze LAND (hot) SEA (cooler) NIGHT LOW P HIGH P Land Breeze LAND (cooler) SEA (warm)
Fig 6.6 — During the day, cool air blows from sea to land. At night, the pattern reverses.

🎯 Day or Night Breeze? — Match the Scenario L3 Apply

Click the correct answer.

Q1. At 3 pm on a sunny day in Chennai, a cool breeze blows from the sea towards the shore.

Sea Breeze Land Breeze

Q2. At 2 am a fisherman near Puri sets sail; a gentle wind from the shore pushes his boat seaward.

Sea Breeze Land Breeze

Q3. Air above Chennai's beach at noon is warmer and rises; air above the Bay of Bengal is cooler.

Sea Breeze forms (sea → land) Land Breeze forms (land → sea)

Q4. Around 11 pm in Goa, the land has cooled faster than the sea.

Sea Breeze Land Breeze

Indian Monsoons — a Giant Sea Breeze

The same idea that makes a daily sea breeze also drives the Indian monsoons — but on a much grander scale, spanning an entire subcontinent and lasting several months.

The Southwest Monsoon (Summer, June–September)

In summer, the Indian landmass heats up enormously. A huge low-pressure region forms over north India. Meanwhile the vast Indian Ocean, especially the Arabian Sea and Bay of Bengal, remains comparatively cooler. High-pressure air over the ocean rushes towards India from the southwest, picking up tons of moisture on the way. When this moist air hits the land and rises (especially over the Western Ghats), it cools, forms clouds and pours down as monsoon rain.

The Northeast Monsoon (Winter, October–December)

In winter the situation reverses. The landmass cools faster than the ocean, creating a high-pressure region over north India. Winds now blow from land towards the sea — from the northeast. These winds are generally dry, but they pick up moisture over the Bay of Bengal and bring winter rain to the eastern coast, especially Tamil Nadu.

Why monsoons matter: More than half of India's farmland depends on monsoon rainfall. Crops like rice, cotton, sugarcane and pulses are timed to the monsoon. A weak monsoon year can cause drought and economic distress; a very strong year can cause floods.
Indian Monsoons INDIA Arabian Sea Bay of Bengal SW Monsoon (Jun–Sep, wet) NE Monsoon (Oct–Dec)
Fig 6.7 — Summer winds (orange) come from the southwest, winter winds (blue) from the northeast.

Global Wind Patterns (Brief Look)

On the scale of the whole planet, the Sun heats the equator much more than the poles. This creates large-scale pressure differences, producing three major wind belts in each hemisphere:

Wind beltLatitude rangeDirection
Trade Winds0° – 30°From NE (N. hemisphere) / SE (S. hemisphere) towards the equator
Westerlies30° – 60°From west to east
Polar Easterlies60° – 90°From the east, flowing away from the poles

Good and Bad Effects of Winds

🌬️
Windmills
Convert wind energy to electricity — a clean renewable source used in Tamil Nadu, Gujarat and Rajasthan.
Sailing & kite-flying
Boats and kites use wind for propulsion or play.
🌼
Pollination & seed dispersal
Pollen from grasses and seeds of plants like drumstick, dandelion, cotton travel on the wind.
👕
Drying & cooling
Wind carries away moisture from wet clothes and perspiring skin, providing comfort.
Destructive side: Very strong winds during storms and cyclones damage houses, uproot trees, bend electric poles, flatten crops and break power lines. The stronger the pressure difference, the stronger — and more dangerous — the winds.

📋 Competency-Based Questions

It is a warm afternoon at Puri beach in Odisha. Kabir notices his kite rising easily as a steady breeze blows from the sea towards the shore. That night he returns to the same spot and finds the wind direction has reversed — it now blows from the land out towards the sea. A fishing boat leaves the harbour, catching the wind on its sail.

Q1. L1 Remember Name the afternoon wind and the night wind that Kabir observes.

Afternoon wind = sea breeze (from sea to land). Night wind = land breeze (from land to sea).

Q2. L2 Understand Why does the wind direction reverse between day and night?

  • A. The Sun changes direction
  • B. Land and sea heat and cool at different rates, creating reversed pressure differences
  • C. The Earth rotates the wind
  • D. The moon pulls the air
Answer: B. Land heats (and cools) faster than water; the warmer region has lower pressure and attracts air from the cooler, higher-pressure region.

Q3. L3 Apply When a strong stream of air is blown between two hanging balloons, they move towards each other. Explain.

Fast-moving air between the balloons has lower pressure than the still air outside. The higher outside pressure pushes both balloons inward. This is Bernoulli's principle.

Q4. L4 Analyse Farmers in Maharashtra celebrate the arrival of the Southwest Monsoon in early June. Explain in 2–3 sentences the chain of events that brings this rainfall.

In summer the Indian landmass heats up strongly and creates a low-pressure zone. The relatively cooler, high-pressure Arabian Sea and Indian Ocean push moist air northeastwards towards India. As this moist air rises over the land (especially the Western Ghats), it cools, forms clouds and releases monsoon rain.

Q5. L5 Evaluate A student says: "Wind is the movement of air from low pressure to high pressure." Evaluate and correct this statement.

The statement is wrong. Like any fluid, air flows from a region of high pressure to low pressure. The greater the pressure difference, the faster the wind. Saying "low to high" reverses the cause–effect relationship.

🔗 Assertion–Reason Questions

Assertion (A): When air moves at high speed, the pressure it exerts decreases.

Reason (R): This phenomenon is the basis of aircraft lift and paint sprays.

  • A. Both A and R are true, and R correctly explains A.
  • B. Both A and R are true, but R does not explain A.
  • C. A is true, R is false.
  • D. A is false, R is true.
Answer: B. Both statements are true, but R gives examples of the principle; it does not explain why fast-moving air has lower pressure.

Assertion (A): During the day, a sea breeze blows from the sea towards the land.

Reason (R): Land heats up faster than the sea, creating low pressure over the land.

  • A. Both A and R are true, and R correctly explains A.
  • B. Both A and R are true, but R does not explain A.
  • C. A is true, R is false.
  • D. A is false, R is true.
Answer: A. Lower pressure over warm land attracts cooler high-pressure air from the sea — this is the sea breeze.

Assertion (A): Indian agriculture depends heavily on the Southwest Monsoon.

Reason (R): In winter, cold winds from the Himalayas bring snowfall to north India.

  • A. Both A and R are true, and R correctly explains A.
  • B. Both A and R are true, but R does not explain A.
  • C. A is true, R is false.
  • D. A is false, R is true.
Answer: B. A is true (crops depend on monsoon rain). R is also true but refers to winter weather — it does not explain agricultural dependence on the summer monsoon.
AI Tutor
Science Class 8 — Curiosity
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Hi! 👋 I'm Gaura, your AI Tutor for Winds and Monsoons. Take your time studying the lesson — whenever you have a doubt, just ask me! I'm here to help.