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What is a depression (UK)? This aerial view shows the fronts, sectors and other features of a depression. Click here to find out about the fronts. The pink area is called the warm sector (this is the warm area of air which the warm front is at the front of. This system rotates anticlockwise and winds blow in towards the centre. Depressions are low pressure systems which bring wet weather to the UK. As the air is rising in the centre of the system, it cools and condenses to form clouds. Winds move anti-clockwise towards the centre, where they are heated up and they rise. The cross-section diagram above shows the position of the fronts and the effect that this has on the air. In short, the COLD FRONT and the WARM FRONT rotate in an anti-clockwise direction and the cold front moves faster than the warm front. Between the two fronts is the area of warm air called the WARM SECTOR. Eventually, when the cold front catches up with the warm front it lifts the warm sector off the ground and creates an OCCLUDED FRONT. If you want to know more about fronts, click here! If the * symbol were to indicate a person standing in the path of a depression for 12 hours, this is the weather that person would experience as the depression moved EAST over that position: 12 pm - cold temperatures, hazy cloud (getting cloudier) and drizzly rain. This is because the person is stood under the warm front, which is much gentler than the cold front. Air rising up this, cools much more slowly. As the front is gentler, it is spread out over a larger area, and so is the rain. 6 pm - warm temperatures, hazy or clear skies, no precipitation. At this point the person would be stood in the warm sector of the depression, hence the warmer temperatures and clear sky. 12 am - cold temperatures, sky obscured by clouds, very heavy rain, clearing to the west. After the warm sector a steeply rising , fast-moving cold front approaches. As it pushes into the warm air of the warm sector, air is forced to rise stepply and rapidly, cooling quickly as it does so. The front is steep, so rain is spread over a smaller area, making it heavier. As the cold front passes over, the temperature drops considerably as the person is stood in the colder air mass. Clearing from the west, the sky becomes less obscured and cumulus clouds can be seen.