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Chapter 6 Weather Systems This chapter examines the way in which atmospheric circulation processes generate the daily variations in temperature, humidity, cloudiness, windiness, and precipitation that we know as weather. An air mass is a large body of air with a similar temperature, moisture, and lapse rate characteristics over thousands of kilometers. The air mass characteristics are acquired in source areas where the air remains for some time allowing it to acquire the characteristics of the surface over which it rests. Air masses are classified on the basis of the latitude and the surface type of the source area. The main air mass classes are: mT maritime tropical mE maritime equatorial cT continental tropical mP maritime Polar cP continental Polar cA continental Arctic cAA continental Antarctic A front is a boundary between one air mass and another. The leading edge of cold air advancing into an area is called a cold front. Warm air moving into an area of cold air is called a warm front. An occluded front develops when a cold front overtakes a warm front and forces warm air aloft. Cyclonic precipitation can occur when moist air is forced aloft and adiabatically cooled in the convergent, upward flow of a cyclone. An important weather system affecting middle and high latitudes is a traveling low pressure system called a wave cyclone that develops along the polar front. Wave cyclones move from west to east and the interaction of warm and cold fronts within the cyclone often produces cyclonic storms. A tornado is an intense low pressure system with very high wind speeds. Tornadoes occur in association with thunderstorms that develop along cold fronts and with hurricanes. A weather system associated with tropical areas is the easterly wave, a low pressure trough into which air converges and is lifted producing precipitation. A polar outbreak occurs when cold polar air forces its way into very low latitudes, bringing storms followed by cold, clear weather. Tropical cyclones, hurricanes, and typhoons are all names for powerful storms which develop over warm ocean surfaces between 8° and 15° latitude, migrate westward, and curve toward the poles. Tropical cyclones often create tremendous damage due to high winds, high waves, flooding, and heavy rains. The atmospheric circulation transfers heat and moisture from equatorial regions toward the Polar Regions by the Hadley cell circulation and Rossby waves. The thermohaline circulation within the oceans is another important mechanism by which heat is transferred from the equatorial to the polar regions of the Earth. An important element of climatic change studies is the positive and negative feedbacks between surface temperature and cloud cover.