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Fronts, Humidity, & Severe Weather AIR MASSES AIR MASSES • FRONT: – The boundary that forms between two colliding air masses – The place where most changes in weather occur FRONTS WARM FRONT • Develops when warm air mass meets cold air mass FRONTS COLD FRONT • Develops when cold air mass invades warm air mass • Cold air forces warm air up rapidly • Clouds form and produce rain and thunderstorms FRONTS STATIONARY FRONT • Happens when pressure differences cause an air mass to stop moving forward • May remain in the same place for days • Light winds and precipitation occur all along the frontal area FRONTS OCCLUDED FRONT • Develops when two cold air masses merge • They force the warm air between them rise • Strong winds and heavy precipitation occur Why is every type of front associated with precipitation??? • They each involve cooling of warm air • Cool air can’t hold as much moisture as warm air • The air becomes saturated and precipitation falls HUMIDITY: Clouds and Precipitation • Humidity is the amount of water vapor in the air. • When droplets reach 0.2 mm, they are too heavy to stay suspended and fall out of the clouds as precipitation. HUMIDITY: Precipitation Rain: • Precipitation that falls in temperatures that are above freezing HUMIDITY: Precipitation Snow: • Water vapor changes directly to a solid without melting first • Falls when temperatures are below freezing HUMIDITY: Precipitation Sleet: • Snow passes through a warm layer of air • It melts • Then it refreezes near the ground HUMIDITY: Precipitation Hail: • Water freezes in layers around a nucleus of ice HUMIDITY: Precipitation Hail Formation: SEVERE WEATHER THUNDERSTORM • Result of rapid upward movement of warm, moist air • Where they occur: – Inside warm moist air masses – At fronts • Falling droplets create downdraft that spreads out at surface, causing winds • Thunder and lightning TORNADO • Violent, whirling wind that moves in a narrow path over land • Warm air is forced upward quickly, causing very low pressure at the surface • Strong winds converge from different directions, collide and rotate violently • Pressure inside the rotation drops rapidly • Funnel cloud appears at the base of the cloud • Water condenses on dirt and debris, causing dark gray color TORNADO • Wind can reach speeds up to 500 km/hr • Usually less than 200 meters in diameter • Usually only last a few minutes • One of the most destructive storms Hurricanes HURRICANES • Largest and most powerful storm • Large swirling low pressure system HURRICANES • Forms over tropical oceans • Winds over 74 mph or 120 km/hr • Usually occur between 5º and 20º north latitude where the water is warm HURRICANES • While it is over water, the warm air will rise and fuel the storm • Over land, the hurricane loses its power HURRICANE IKE • Strong hurricanes cause severe damage • Main concerns of a hurricane are floods and storm surges. HURRICANE DAMAGE