Matt-hurricanewatcher wrote:At night a convergent lay or inversion forms. That doe's not allow the winds to mix as good as when the sun can mix this out. So that is why you have stronger winds at day.
A convergent layer inversion? Hmm, I'm thinking that is not the same as a temperature inversion. What is that?
Okay, wait. Are you saying that a temperature inversion occurs at night within the convergence layer? That would mean temperatures increase with height (slightly) in this layer. Parcels would therefore rise less effectively (surrounding atmospheric environment is not as cold), which would inhibit the maintenance of low surface pressures. Surface winds would thereby weaken. Is that correct?