I've told you that I can't work out (i.e. physics) how the equator can have air moving at 1000mph and the pole can have air moving at 0mph without there being a constant current of air between the two.
Try this. Spin a snow globe at a constant speed. Do you have a turn table? At some point the snow will settle (equilibrium , zero wind). At that point look down into the globe from the top. The snow near the center (analogous to north pole) will be hardly moving at all. While the snow at the sides (anagous to the equator) will be spinning quite fast. Even though the snow is not moving relative to the snow globe, from outside that inertial reference point you can tell is is moving quite fast.
Sorry, yes, 1000mph is more like it.
I'm not sure what you are really asking me.
I've told you that I can't work out (i.e. physics) how the equator can have air moving at 1000mph and the pole can have air moving at 0mph without there being a constant current of air between the two.
Try this. Spin a snow globe at a constant speed. Do you have a turn table? At some point the snow will settle (equilibrium , zero wind). At that point look down into the globe from the top. The snow near the center (analogous to north pole) will be hardly moving at all. While the snow at the sides (anagous to the equator) will be spinning quite fast. Even though the snow is not moving relative to the snow globe, from outside that inertial reference point you can tell is is moving quite fast.