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- Air Masses and Fronts Types of Air Masses Air masses are large bodies of air that has properties similar to the part of the Earth over which it developed. Air masses can be warm or cold, and humid or dry. As an air mass moves into an area, the weather changes. - Air Masses and Fronts Classifying Air Masses Four major types of air masses influence the weather in North America: maritime tropical, continental tropical, maritime polar, and continental polar. North American Air Masses High and Low Pressure Areas • High pressure causes air to sink • Usually results in several days of clear sunny skies • Air rises in low pressure areas and forms water droplets • Usually results in rain and storms How a Front Forms Any Boundary between two different air masses Generally means a change in weather Four Types Types of Fronts Cold Front Occurs when colder air advances toward warm air. Cold air wedges under warmer air. Warm Front Forms when lighter, warmer air advances over heavier, colder air. Stationary Front Occurs when a boundary between air masses stops advancing. Occluded Front Forms when a cold air mass moves toward a cool air with warm air between the two. The colder air forces the warm air upward. - Air Masses and Fronts Comparing and Contrasting compare and contrast the four types of fronts by completing a table like the one below. Front How It Forms Cold front A cold air mass overtakes a warm air mass. A warm air mass overtakes a cold air mass. Cold and warm air masses meet, but neither can move the other. A warm air mass is caught between two cold air masses. Warm front Stationary front Occluded front Types of Weather Clouds, possibly storms with heavy precipitation Clouds, light precipitation Clouds, precipitation Clouds, precipitation - Storms Thunderstorm Formation A thunderstorm forms when warm, humid air rises rapidly within a cumulonimbus cloud. - Storms Tornado Formation Tornadoes can form when warm, humid air rises rapidly in thick cumulonimbus clouds— the same type of clouds that bring thunderstorms. - Storms Tornado Alley Tornadoes in the U.S. are most likely to occur in a region known as Tornado Alley. - Storms Structure of a Hurricane In a hurricane, air moves rapidly around a low-pressure area called the eye. - Storms Hurricane Andrew The path of Hurricane Andrew over three consecutive days can be seen below. Severe Weather Type of Storm Where Forms Hurricane Safety Rules Spring or Summer Seek shelter, avoid trees and water. Cumulonimbus cloud Spring, early summer Move to a storm shelter or basement if possible; stay away from windows and doors. Over warm ocean water Late summer and into autumn Evacuate or move inside a well-built building. Within large Thunderstorms cumulonimbus clouds Tornado Typical Time of Year - Predicting the Weather Reading Weather Maps Weather maps in newspapers use symbols to show fronts, high- and low-pressure areas, and precipitation. Color bands indicate different temperature ranges. - Predicting the Weather Reading Weather Maps This is the type of weather map produced by the National Weather Service. It shows data collected from many weather stations. Isobars Isobars- connect areas of equal barometric pressure Isotherm- connects areas of equal temperature Isobars Weather Maps: Pressure & Temperature - Predicting the Weather Reading Weather Map Symbols The figure below shows what various weather symbols mean in a station model. Cloud Cover Symbols • You will often see the circles drawn on a weather map Weather Maps: Doppler Radar Maps Where are the Fronts? L Where are the Fronts? L H L Slides provided by Prentice Hall PowerPoint Presentations