Cold fronts, Warm fronts, Stationary fronts and Occluded fronts.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
High and Low Pressure Systems Weather Systems Unit
Advertisements

Part 5: Weather Patterns
Fronts Caroline, El, and Sarah.
Regents Earth Science HIGH AND LOW PRESSURE SYSTEMS WEATHER SYSTEMS UNIT By the end of this class, you will be able to: *Compare and contrast high and.
Air Masses and Fronts. Air Mass Large body of air with uniform temperature and humidity Air masses take on the characteristics of the region from where.
Fronts. Fronts are the boundaries between two air masses.
Fronts Weather Systems
FRONTS phschool The movement of air masses is determined by the prevailing winds and upper air currents   This causes most local weather condition.
Unit 4-5: Fronts. What is a “front”? A front is the boundary between two air masses. The “surface” of a front always slopes.  The slope is due to the.
Weather Fronts The key to the weather map Assembled by Ken Mitchell Livermore TOPScience.
Weather. Weather - Short term conditions of the atmosphere based on four things: – 1. Temperature – 2. Humidity – 3. Air pressure – 4. Wind.
Weather Fronts Ms. Bireley’s 8 th Grade Science. What is a front? Boundary separating two masses of air of different densities and is the principal cause.
Reading a Weather Map To find the weather map go to: nal/index_large.html.
Air Masses and Fronts – II. Brief review An air mass is a large body of air whose properties of temperature and humidity are fairly similar in any horizontal.
Weather Patterns.
Air Masses Cold fronts, Warm fronts, Stationary fronts and Occluded fronts.
Air masses and Fronts.
Weather Prediction  How do weather forecasters predict the weather? How do weather forecasters predict the weather? How do weather forecasters predict.
Weather Forecasting Guide
An air mass is a large body of air that has similar temperature and moisture properties.
From highs to lows and everywhere in between
WEATHER The term weather describes the state of the air at a particular place and time – whether it is warm or cold, wet or dry, and how cloudy or windy.
Lecture 4 (9/30) METR 1111 Station Plots and Fronts.
Warm Up 4/1/08 Which type of air mass originates in northern Canada?
Warm up. Poirier Meteorology  The study of processes that govern Earth’s atmosphere to help make weather predictions  List as many things as you.
Regents Earth Science HIGH AND LOW PRESSURE SYSTEMS WEATHER SYSTEMS UNIT By the end of this class, you will be able to: *Compare and contrast high and.
Weather Fronts and Pressure Systems 7 th Grade Science Mr. Bombick.
Objective: Determine the humidity and temperature of air masses.
The Air Masses cP( continental polar) : cold, dry stable cT( continental tropical) : hot, dry, stable air aloft, unstable at the surface mP( maritime.
The Weather Test Review. Air masses and fronts –Four types of air masses in N. America (Maritime means wet because the clouds formed over the ocean, continental.
Air Masses and Fronts Science 6th Grade.
Weather Maps Weather Maps.
The Course of Synoptic Meteorology
Sit somewhere Pick up a weather sheet and complete.
Air Masses and Fronts Science 6th Grade.
Air Masses and Fronts REVIEW
Weather Patterns and Severe Storms
High and Low Pressure Systems Weather Systems Unit
The Course of Synoptic Meteorology
Chapter 9 Air Masses and Fronts
AIR MASSES AND FRONTS.
Weather Notes Fronts Part 5
Wednesday April 18, 2018 (Discussion – Stationary and Occluded Fronts, Dew Points, Dry Lines, Wall Clouds)
Weather: Maps, Symbols, and Basic Concepts
Local Winds.
Warm Up January 25, 2011.
Source Regions and Pressure Systems
Part 3 Why Do We Have Weather?
Air Mass A large body of air with similar temperature, humidity, and air pressure. Air masses form over large land or water masses. MAP TAP Weather.
North American Air masses
Weather Patterns and Severe Storms
Fronts By 2/O John Jaromahum.
Occluded front: When a cold front catches up to a warm front.
Occluded front: When a cold front catches up to a warm front.
Cold fronts, Warm fronts, Stationary fronts and Occluded fronts.
Air Masses and Fronts Science 6th Grade.
Air Masses and Fronts Science 6th Grade.
Cold fronts, Warm fronts, Stationary fronts and Occluded fronts.
Air masses form over large land or water masses. Air Mass
Weather Fronts 1.
Occluded front: When a cold front catches up to a warm front.
Winds.
Latitude What is Latitude? Lines of Latitude run horizontally
Air Masses and Fronts Ch. 16, sec 2
Weather Forecasting.
Air Masses and Fronts Science 6th Grade.
Air Mass & Air Fronts SPI
Air Masses and Fronts – II
The Course of Synoptic Meteorology
Air Masses and Fronts Science 6th Grade.
Presentation transcript:

Cold fronts, Warm fronts, Stationary fronts and Occluded fronts. Air Masses Cold fronts, Warm fronts, Stationary fronts and Occluded fronts.

Fronts A front is defined as the transition zone between two air masses of different density. Fronts extend not only in the horizontal direction, but in the vertical as well. Therefore, when referring to the frontal surface (or frontal zone), we referring to both the horizontal and vertical components of the front. Stationary Front A front that is not moving. Cold Front Leading edge of colder air that is replacing warmer air. Warm Front Leading edge of warmer air that is replacing cooler air. Occluded Front When a cold front catches up to a warm front.

Cold Front A cold front is defined as the transition zone where a cold air mass is replacing a warmer air mass. Cold fronts generally move from northwest to southeast. The air behind a cold front is noticeably colder and drier than the air ahead of it. When a cold front passes through, temperatures can drop more than 15 degrees within the first hour. Symbolically, a cold front is represented by a solid line with triangles along the front pointing towards the warmer air and in the direction of movement. On colored weather maps, a cold front is drawn with a solid blue line.

There is typically a noticeable temperature change from one side of a cold front to the other. In the map of surface temperatures below, the station east of the front reported a temperature of 55 degrees Fahrenheit while a short distance behind the front, the temperature decreased to 38 degrees. An abrupt temperature change over a short distance is a good indicator that a front is located somewhere in between.

Warm Front A warm front is defined as the transition zone where a warm air mass is replacing a cold air mass. Warm fronts generally move from southwest to northeast and the air behind a warm front is warmer and more moist than the air ahead of it. When a warm front passes through, the air becomes noticeably warmer and more humid than it was before. Symbolically, a warm front is represented by a solid line with semicircles pointing towards the colder air and in the direction of movement. On colored weather maps, a warm front is drawn with a solid red line.

If colder air is replacing warmer air, then the front should be analyzed as a cold front. On the other hand, if warmer air is replacing cold air, then the front should be analyzed as a warm front.

Occluded Front 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.                                                                                   

Occluded Front As the storm intensifies, the cold front rotates around the storm and catches the warm front. This forms an occluded front, which is the boundary that separates the new cold air mass (to the west) from the older cool air mass already in place north of the warm front. Symbolically, an occluded front is represented by a solid line with alternating triangles and circles pointing the direction the front is moving. On colored weather maps, an occluded front is drawn with a solid purple line.

Changes in temperature, dew point temperature, and wind direction can occur with the passage of an occluded front. In the map below, temperatures ahead (east of) the front were reported in the low 40's while temperatures behind (west of) the front were in the 20's and 30's. The lower dew point temperatures behind the front indicate the presence of drier air.

Stationary Front 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.

Stationary Front In the map above, temperatures south of the stationary front were in the 50's and 60's with winds generally from the southeast. However, north of the stationary front, temperatures were in the 40's while the winds had shifted around to the northeast. Cyclones migrating along a stationary front can dump heavy amounts of precipitation, resulting in significant flooding along the front.

Answer these questions 1. An area where air masses meet but do not mix is called a … Front 2. After a cold front moves through an area, cool dry air moves in, often bringing ______skies and ______temperatures. Clear and cooler

Answer these questions 3. After a warm front passes through an area, the weather is likely to warm and ______. Humid 4. Sometimes cold and warm air masses meet, but neither one has enough force to move the other. This is called a _______ front. Stationary

Answer these questions 5. At a(n) _________front, a warm air mass is caught between two cooler air masses. Occluded 6. The symbol for a cold front looks like; A. B. C.