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11: Fronts and Airmasses

  • Page ID
    46098
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    Alison Nugent and Shintaro Russell

    Learning Objectives

    By the end of this chapter, you should be able to:

    • Describe what an “air mass” is and how it forms
    • Name some of the main types of air masses
    • Draw a vertical cross-section schematic of a warm and cold front
    • Recognize the symbols for warm, cold, and occluded fronts
    • Discuss the types of cloud patterns associated with warm and cold fronts
    • Explain how differences in temperature (warm or cold fronts) or differences in humidity (dry lines) are important to weather

    • 11.1: Introduction
      This page covers the identification of low and high pressure areas on weather maps via isobars, detailing typical air pressure levels across regions. It introduces air masses as areas in the atmosphere with similar properties and highlights the prevalence of high pressure systems among them.
    • 11.2: Air Masses
      This page explains air masses as large bodies of air with uniform temperature and moisture, categorized by origin and characteristics like tropical or polar. Key types include maritime and continental variations. They form in stable high-pressure systems and can change characteristics as they move. The interaction between different air masses leads to the formation of fronts, which significantly influence weather patterns.
    • 11.3: Surface Fronts
      This page explains surface fronts, the boundaries between different air masses, detailing four types: cold, warm, occluded, and stationary fronts. Cold fronts replace warm air, often causing thunderstorms, while warm fronts lead to steady precipitation as warm air displaces cold. Occluded fronts occur when cold fronts overtake warm fronts, and stationary fronts happen when air masses remain still.


    11: Fronts and Airmasses is shared under a CC BY-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.