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Storms and the Movement of Air Textbook pages 348-355
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AIR MASSES ► Huge bodies of air that are formed over water or land in tropical or polar regions. ► Temperature and humidity within the air masses is important to the weather conditions that develop.
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FRONTS ► As air masses move and collide they form fronts between them.
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WARM FRONTS ► A warm air mass collides and moves over a slowly moving cold air mass. ► Can bring long periods of precipitation and warmer temperatures.
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COLD FRONTS ► Cold air mass slides under warm air. ► May produce thunderstorms, tornadoes, and cooler temperatures.
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STATIONARY FRONTS ► A cold air mass and a warm air mass do not move at a front ► Produces long periods of precipitation.
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OCCLUDED FRONTS ► A warm air mass is caught between two cold air masses. ► Causes clouds, rain and snow.
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HIGH/LOW PRESSURE SYSTEMS ► Caused by warm air rising or cold air sinking combined with the spinning of the Earth which makes the air spin forming these systems.
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High Pressure ► High Pressure Systems: signal fair weather with winds circulating around the system clockwise.
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Low Pressure ► Low Pressure Systems: signal rain and stormy weather with winds circulating counter-clockwise
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STORMS ► Occur when pressure differences cause rapid air movement causing severe weather conditions.
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THUNDERSTORMS ► Storm with lightning, thunder, heavy rains, and strong wind that form within large cumulonimbus clouds. ► Usually form along a cold front.
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TORNADO ► Rapidly, whirling funnel- shaped clouds that reaches down from a storm cloud. ► Very low pressure and strong winds can cause great damage. ► Likely to form within the frontal regions where strong thunderstorms are also present.
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HURRICANE ► Low pressure tropical storm that forms over warm ocean water. ► Winds form a spinning circular pattern around the center (eye). ► The lower the air pressure at the center, the faster the winds blow.
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