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Air Masses & Fronts. Air Masses. Objective: to identify the different types of air masses & where they originate from. Air Mass Defined:. A large body of air found in the lower troposphere that is similar throughout in: humidity (wetness/dryness) and temperature. Air Masses.
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Air Masses Objective: to identify the different types of air masses & where they originate from.
Air Mass Defined: • A large body of air found in the lower troposphere that is similar throughout in: humidity (wetness/dryness) and temperature
Air Masses • cA- continental arctic, very cold and dry (from northern Alaska/Canada) • cP- continental polar, cold and dry (from southern Alaska/Canada) (if travels over H2O, can cause snow) • mP- maritime polar, cold and wet (from north pacific/Atlantic ocean) • mT- maritime tropical, warm and wet (from gulf of Mexico) • cT- continental tropical, warm and dry (from Mexico and central America) (since dry=no clouds)
Answer: 1. Where do cold & hot air masses originate? 2. Where do moist & dry air masses originate?
Jet Streams • A fast moving stream of air found in the upper atmosphere (like a “river of air”) • Found at 30 degrees and 60 degrees north and south of the equator (between convection cells where hot and cold air meet)
Fronts Objective: To identify the different types of fronts and how they are caused
Review: Air Masses • An air mass is a large body of air that has similar temperature and humidity • If an air mass forms over land (continental) it has low humidity • If an air mass forms over an ocean (maritime) it has high humidity • Air masses are either hot or cold
What happens when air masses run into each other? • FRONTS! • Air masses don’t mix together • The boundary where the air masses meet is called a front • Fronts are common at mid-latitudes, where tropical and polar air masses commonly meet
What happens when air masses run into each other? • Air masses have different temperatures and humidity levels • When they collide, the more dense air mass goes under the less dense air mass
Fronts • A front is a place where two different air masses meet
4 types of fronts: • Each bring different types of weather
Cold Front • Occurs when a polar (cold) air mass runs into (& replaces) a tropical (warm) air mass • The warm air is less dense and gets pushed above the cold air mass http://www.classzone.com/books/earth_science/terc/content/visualizations/es2002/es2002page01.cfm
Cold Front • Temperatures drop, and there is usually precipitation • Thunderstorms are usually a result of a cold front
Warm Front • Warm front- when warm (less dense) air moves forward (advances) and replaces cold air: forms a wedge shape. http://www.classzone.com/books/earth_science/terc/content/visualizations/es2002/es2002page01.cfm
Warm Front • Results in warmer temperatures, often higher humidity • Usually precipitation for several days • http://www.atmosphere.mpg.de/enid/1__Weather___Fronts/__Worksheet_1_4ap.html
Stationary Front • Occurs when neither the warm air or the cold air is advancing • The less dense warm air will rise above the cold air
Stationary Front • Clouds and precipitation occur • If a stationary front stays for too long, flooding can occur
Occluded Front • Occurs when a cold front catches up with a warm front • Cold fronts move twice as fast as warm fronts
Occluded Front • Causes cloudiness and precipitation