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What Causes the Weather?. Air Masses. Air Masses. Large Bodies of air (Can be 1000s of sq miles) Form over both land and water Over Land Air Masses are: Dry Warm in summer and cold in winter Over Water Air Masses are: Moist Relatively stable temperatures. Air Masses Move.
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Air Masses • Large Bodies of air (Can be 1000s of sq miles) • Form over both land and water • Over Land Air Masses are: • Dry • Warm in summer and cold in winter • Over Water Air Masses are: • Moist • Relatively stable temperatures
Air Masses Move • Storms are caused when two different air masses make contact • This causes wind, rapid temperature change and precipitation • The line between two air masses is called a “front”
Warm Front • Occurs when a warm air mass moves into a cooler area • Warm air rises above the cooler air • This will cause precipitation and fog • Very common in the Spring (April showers bring May flowers)
Cold Front • Can move twice as fast as warm fronts • Cold air masses move to a warmer area • The cold air forces itself under the warmer air • As the warm air rises it cools quickly • Can cause severe weather such as thunderstorms
Clouds • Formed when water vapour in the air cools and condenses (changes to liquid) • There are three main types • Cirrus • Cumulus • Stratus • These can combine to form other types
Cirrus Clouds • Form high in the atmosphere (10-15kms) • Very cold and made up of ice crystals • Formed when warm air is pushed very high upwards • Usually a result of a cold front and means bad weather is coming
Cumulus Clouds • Most familiar looking clouds • Approximately 500 meters above us • Made up of water droplets • Usually form when sunshine warms a pocket of air causing it to rise and condense • Usually a sign of fair weather
Stratus Clouds • Very low level clouds • Sometimes touch the ground (fog) • Average 1km thick • Build when warm air rises slowly over cold air • Usually the result of a warm front
Forecasting • The main goal in studying these systems is to accurately predict the weather • This is extremely difficult because • There are many variables (temp, currents, etc) • These variables can be unpredictable • Everything is connected
El Nino • This occurs when the waters of the South Pacific become warmer • Usually every 3 to 7 years • This has drastic global consequences • Winds change direction • Brings heavy rains to deserts • Brings drought to farmland • Very unpredictable patterns
Jet Streams • Very high altitude winds (9000-12000 m) • Very fast: more than 300km/h • These dictate the paths storms will follow • By using weather balloons we can identify the locations of jet streams and therefore predict the directions storms will go