fronts. fronts are the boundaries between two air masses
Post on 16-Dec-2015
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If the front is essentially not moving (i.e. the air masses are not moving) it is called a stationary front.
This usually favors the development of widespread layered or stratus cloudiness and precipitation along and to the north of the front.
Symbolically, a warm front is represented by a solid line with semicircles pointing towards the colder air and in the direction of movement.
An abrupt temperature change over a short distance is a good indication that a front is located somewhere in between.
This usually leads to a narrow band of showers and thunderstorms along or just ahead of the front, especially if the rising air is unstable.
Before the front arrives, winds ahead of the front (in the warmer air mass) are typically out of the south-southwest, but once the front passes through, winds usually shift around to the west-northwest (in the colder air mass).
In the occluded front, the cold air undercuts the cooler air mass associated with the warm front, further lifting the already rising warm air.
When a warm or cold front stops moving, it becomes a stationary front. Once this boundary resumes its forward motion, it once again becomes a warm front or cold front. A stationary front is represented by alternating blue and red lines with blue triangles pointing towards the warmer air and red semicircles pointing towards the colder air.
A developing cyclone typically has a preceding warm front(the leading edge of a warm moist air mass) and a faster moving cold front (the leading edge of a colder drier air mass wrapping around the storm). North of the warm front is a mass of cooler air that was in place before the storm even entered the region.
A cyclone is an area of low pressure around which the winds flow counterclockwise in the Northern Hemisphere and clockwise in the Southern Hemisphere.
A high pressure center is represented on a weather map by a blue "H" and air diverges outward from a surface high. With air moving away from this region, air must sink from above to replace it. This sinking motion leads to generally fair skies and no precipitation near the high.
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