Who will draw me a detailed explanation of the Atlantic ocean current and the Indian Ocean monsoon current?
The Atlantic ocean current forms a north-south circulation system: the northern circulation runs clockwise and consists of the North Equatorial Warm Current, the Antilles Warm Current, the Gulf of Mexico Warm Current and the Canary Cold Current, among which the Gulf of Mexico Warm Current extends to the North Atlantic Warm Current and goes deep into the Arctic Ocean; The circulation in the south is anticlockwise, which consists of the South Equatorial Warm Current, the Brazil Warm Current, the west wind drift and Benguela Cold Current. There is an equatorial countercurrent between the two circulations, which reaches the Gulf of Guinea from west to east and is called the Guinea Warm Current. The monsoon current in the North Indian Ocean can be described by a formula-eastward in summer and westward in winter. Genesis: 1 In summer, due to the southeasterly trade winds in the southern hemisphere moving northward with the direct point of the sun, the southwest monsoon is formed under the influence of geostrophic bias, and the surface water in the northern Indian Ocean flows eastward clockwise under the action of the southwest monsoon. 2. Winter is mainly because the northeast trade winds in the northern hemisphere move southward with the direct point of the sun and control the northern Indian Ocean. Under the action of the northeast trade wind, the seawater in the northern Indian Ocean flows counterclockwise to the west. Nature: The North Indian Ocean belongs to the monsoon region, which is controlled by the monsoon all the year round, so it is a monsoon current, and near the equator, influenced by the equatorial low pressure belt, it is a warm current in nature. Therefore, the current in the North Indian Ocean is a warm monsoon current.