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Air Masses, Fronts and Global Wind Patterns

Air Masses, Fronts and Global Wind Patterns. Meteorology. Air Masses. Definition:. Air mass - a large dome of air which has similar horizontal temperature and moisture characteristics throughout. Very similar to a balloon. Continental Arctic (cA):. Frigid – record low temperatures

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Air Masses, Fronts and Global Wind Patterns

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  1. Air Masses, Fronts and Global Wind Patterns Meteorology

  2. Air Masses

  3. Definition: • Air mass - a large dome of air which has similar horizontal temperature and moisture characteristics throughout. • Very similar to a balloon.

  4. Continental Arctic (cA): • Frigid – record low temperatures • Dry - very low dew points • Dense - very high barometric pressure • Usually originate north of the Arctic Circle • Siberian Express; Polar Vortex low pressure system • Usually once or twice a winter • very rarely form during the summer • (the sun warms the Arctic)

  5. Continental polar (cP): • Cold and dry - stable • Usually originates in NW Territory of Canada • Influences mainly the northern USA • Responsible for clear and pleasant weather during the summer • Usually in winter • Creates troughs in the polar jet stream • Lake effect snow in Great Lakes areas

  6. Maritime polar (mP): • Cool and moist - unstable • Originate over N. Atlantic and N. Pacific • Main Influence - the Pacific Northwest and the Northeast. • can form any time of the year • Generally not as cold as cP air masses

  7. Maritime tropical (mT): • Warm and very moist – unstable • Originate in the Gulf of Mexico and the Southern Atlantic Ocean • Influences the eastern USA • Most prevalent during summer • Responsible for hot, humid summer days across the South and the East.

  8. Continental Tropical (cT): • Very Hot and very dry – stable aloft • Originates in Desert Southwest and northern Mexico • Occurs in the summer, rarely in winter • Usually keeps the Desert Southwest scorching above 100oF during summer • Generally clear skies, hot, low humidity

  9. Fronts and their symbols

  10. Fronts: • Boundary between two air masses • Characterized by shift in weather • Cold • Warm • Stationary • Occluded

  11. Cold Fronts • Temperature – drops rapidly • Pressure – rises steadily • Clouds – Vertical building • Precipitation – Heavy along front • Winds – Strong and shifting • Typically move faster than warm front

  12. Cold Front

  13. Cold Front (Fozzy)

  14. In the summer, cold fronts can trigger: • thunderstorms • large hail • dangerous winds • tornadoes

  15. Graphic Depiction!

  16. Warm Fronts • Temperature – rises slowly • Pressure – slight rise, then fall • Clouds – strato- and cirro- • Precipitation – long, steady • Winds – variable and light • Typically will have affect for days

  17. Warm Front

  18. Warm Front

  19. Effects of warm fronts • Slow-moving warm front can mean days of wet weather before warm air • Sometimes water vapor in warm fronts condense to produce • rain • snow • sleet • freezing rain

  20. Stationary Front

  21. Stationary Fronts • Temperature – stagnent • Pressure – slightly fluctuates • Clouds – altocumulus • Precipitation – none • Winds – variable and light • Can last for days weeks

  22. Occluded Front Occluded fronts usually form around mature low pressure areas. There are two types of occlusion, warm and cold: In a cold occlusion, the air mass overtaking the warm front is cooler than the cool air ahead of the warm front, and plows under both air masses. In a warm occlusion, the air mass overtaking the warm front is not as cool as the cold air ahead of the warm front, and rides over the colder air mass while lifting the warm air.

  23. Occluded Fronts • Temperature – • Warm – gets milder • Cold – gets colder • Pressure – • Warm - slight drop • Cold – slight rise • Clouds – cumulus • Precipitation – steady and light • Winds – variable and light

  24. Occluded Front

  25. Winds • Horizontal movements at surface • Names from WHERE it came from…not where it is going!!! • North wind means it comes from the north… colder temps

  26. Around Pressure Cells

  27. Pressure Cells • High – In and Up • Converge at surface • Ascend in center • Diverge Aloft • Low – Down and Out • Converge aloft • Descend in center • Diverge at surface

  28. Fujita Scale (NationalAtlas.com)

  29. Reasoning for Tornadoes • Orographic Perfection • Meeting of • Moist - mT • Hot - cT • Cool – cP Rocky Mtn.

  30. Tornado Alley

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