So how do we get our particular
weather? An illustration:
- Results From collisions between air masses
- What is an air mass?
- An "air mass" is a large mass of air that stays in one place long enough to pick up the characteristics of that region.
- What kind of "characteristic"? Mostly characteristics of humidity and temperature.
- Warm air masses form near the tropics
- Cold air masses for near the poles
- Humid air masses form over oceans
- Dry air masses form over continents
- Examples commonly affecting the US:
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- These air masses can combine in various ways:
Conditions:
Cold
Warm
Dry
cP
cT
Humid
mP
mT
- cP refers to "continental Polar" air masses, which will be dry and cold, for instance.
- When Air Masses Collide:
- The primary factor affecting density is temperature.
- Fronts (see drawing below):
- Imagine we start with either warm or cold air on the left, and a vertical boundary between the air masses.
- The air mass on the left begins to move towards the right.
- Warm Front (left):
- When warm air moves towards cold air:
- warm air is less dense than cold air, so it gradually slides up and over the cold air
- warm air slides up at a small angle, gradually cooling off
- results in a wide area of steady rain
- caused by a layered (stratus) cloud that produces rain (stratonimbus)
- may take a few days to pass by.
- Cold front (right):
- When cold air moves towards warm air:
- cold air is more dense than warm air, so it is forced underneath the warm air
- warm air is forced to rise rapidly at a large angle, cooling quickly
- results in a narrow area of intense rain storms, lots of lightning
- caused by a vertically rising cloud (cumulus) producing that rain and lightning (cumulonimbus)
- may pass in only a few hours
- Click HERE for "animation" of cross sections.
- Occluded Front Map symbol
- Note that in the map symbol to the left, a cold front from the west has caught up with a warm front, and they've merged. In this situation cold air is on BOTH sides, and warm air between is being pushed upwards (see the animation link above)
- Because of that, the Occluded Front Map Symbol has warm front (i.e. rounded) AND cold front (i.e. rectangular) bumps on the symbol, pointing towards the east, where both the cold front and the warm front were headed.
- Also note that all 4 of the map symbols shown are in color, as shown on your computer or on a color TV. But on paper, they will be in black and white. Make sure you understand the symbols that designate the various map symbols.