Concepts

Jet Streams

CAPF wiki1 min read6 sections
At a glance
SubjectGeography

Definition

Narrow belts of very fast, high-altitude winds in the upper troposphere that flow generally from west to east and steer weather systems.

Key points

  • Found in the upper troposphere (about 9 to 12 km up); blow west to east at speeds often exceeding 100 km per hour.
  • Major types: the polar jet stream and the subtropical jet stream (one in each hemisphere); their position shifts with the seasons.
  • The subtropical westerly jet stream lies over north India in winter; its withdrawal northwards (over the Tibetan plateau) helps trigger the onset of the south-west monsoon.
  • The tropical easterly jet stream forms over India in summer and is linked to the monsoon's progress.
  • Western disturbances, which bring winter rain to north-west India, are steered eastwards by the subtropical westerly jet stream.

Why it matters for CAPF

The link between the subtropical westerly jet's withdrawal and monsoon onset, and between the jet and western disturbances, is a recurring climatology item.

Common confusion

Subtropical westerly jet (winter over north India, linked to monsoon onset and western disturbances) versus the tropical easterly jet (summer); jet streams flow west to east.

One-line recall

Fast upper-air west-to-east winds; the subtropical westerly jet's withdrawal helps trigger the Indian monsoon onset.

Parent note

climatology atmosphere and winds

← BackAll of Concepts