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Weather Patterns and Severe Weather By Braedyn Taft Earth Science Thomasina Mandan April 24th 2012 For this assignment I chose Chapter fourteen, it discusses the weather patterns and severe weather. Since we did not make it to this chapter I thought I’d do my power point on it so I could learn more about weather patterns and share it with the rest of the class. The first thing that was talked about in this chapter was violent weather such as Tornadoes, Hurricanes, and Thun9+derstorms. These three patterns have caused so much destruction in the world. Most people are familiar with Hurricane Katrina. Thunderstorms are more common than tornadoes and hurricanes. An air mass is an immense body of air; it is 1600 kilometers or (1000 miles) across and several kilometers thick. It is characterized by similarity of temperature and moisture at any given altitude. Air masses can bring some of the coldest weathers. The air mass is modified, but it also modifies the weather in the areas over which it moves. It might take several days for an air mass to move across an area. Constant weather is then known as air mass weather. Air mass is important because it is closely related to the study of atmospheric disturbances. Disturbances along boundary zones separate different air masses. Air masses are classified according to their source region. Polar and arctic air masses originate in very high altitudes toward earth’s poles. When they form in low latitudes they are called tropical air masses. So, Polar, tropical, and arctic indicate temperature of an air mass. The polar and arctic represent cold weather and tropical represents warm weather. Also, air masses are classified according to the nature of the surface in the source region. Another term called continental air mass is formed over land whereas, maritime air masses are formed over water. Continental and maritime have moisture characteristics of the air mass, but the continental air mass is likely to be dry and maritime’s air is humid. These two air masses influence the weather of North America the most. Air mass is a large body of air, usually 1600 kilometers or 1000 miles. It is characterized by a sameness of temperature and moisture at any given altitude. When this air moves out of its region it carries temperatures and moisture conditions. It later affects the weather of an area. The four basic types of air masses are continental polar, continental tropical, maritime polar, and maritime tropical. Fronts are boundaries that separate different air masses, one warmer than the other, and also has higher moisture. Fronts form between two contrasting air masses. These fronts are usually narrow. The front slopes at a low angle so that warmer air overlies cooler air. Air masses on both sides of the front move in the same direction and at the same speed. Fronts are said to act like a barrier, because it move along between the two air masses. When air masses change to another, mixing occurs. No matter which air mass is advancing it is always warmer and less dense. The cooler, denser, air acts as the wedge which lifts. Overrunning is warm air gliding up along a cold air mass. When the surface position of a front moves so that warm air covers by cool air it is called warm front. A warm front produced as warm air glides up over a cold air mass. Precipitation is moderate and occurs within a few hundred kilometers of the surface front. As warm air ascends the retreating wedge of cold air, it expands and cools to produce clouds and precipitation. Cold fronts are the boundary when dense cold air is actively advancing into a region occupied by warmer air. Friction slows the surface position of a cold front so its position is aloft. The cold front steepens as it moves because of the relative positions of the adjacent air masses. The cold fronts are as twice as steep as the warm fronts. A cold front usually comes from the west or northwest. A dark band of clouds are usually present in the distance. A cold front produces the same amount of lifting as a warm front.