Transcript File

12-7
What are air masses?
12-7 Air Masses
Air mass- large volume of air
with same temp. and moisture.
Air mass is affected by the
region it covers- land, ocean,
hot, or cold.
Masses can be dry, moist,
warm, or cold.
12-7 Polar Air Masses
 Polar air masses- cold air
masses that form over cold
regions.
 Continental polar air mass- a
dry polar air mass that forms
over land and forms over
Canada and moves into the US.
12-7 Polar Air Masses
Maritime polar air
masses- moist, cold air
masses that form over
oceans and move into US
via north Pacific and
Atlantic Oceans.
12-7 Tropical Air Masses
 Tropical air masses- warm air
masses that form over the equator.
 Maritime tropical air massesmoist, warm air masses that form
over water. US is affected by those
that form over Caribbean and Gulf
of Mexico and the oceans.
12-7 Tropical Air Masses
Continental tropical air masses-
dry, warm masses that form over
land, usually coming from
Mexico to the US.
Jet Streams
Jet streams are currents of fast
moving air.
They travel more than 300 km
per hr. in a west to east
direction.
They form due to temp. and air
pressure differences.
12-7 Lesson Summary
Air mass- large area of air with
same temp. and moisture
content.
Air mass is affected by the
region it covers.
12-7 Lesson Summary
Polar air masses- cold regions;
may be maritime polar or
continental polar.
Tropical air masses- form near
equator; may be continental or
maritime air masses.
12-7 Class Work
 Complete Checking Concepts and Thinking
Critically.
12-8
 What is a front?
12-8 Boundaries in Air
 Front- the front surface/edge
between different air masses.
 Air masses move from W to E in the
US.
 As air masses move, they do not
meet, but instead form fronts
between them that bring changes in
the weather.
12-8 Cold Front
 Cold front- forward edge of a cold
air mass.
 Cold front forms when a cold air
mass pushes under a warm air mass.
 Cold fronts usually bring t-storms,
gusty winds, cloudy skies, and cold
air behind them.
12-8 Warm Fronts
Warm front- the forward edge
of a warm air mass.
A warm front forms when a
warm air mass pushes over a
cooler air mass.
Warm Front, cont.
Cirrus clouds then stratus clouds
form as warm front moves, and
long, steady precipitation usually
follows.
After front pushes through,slow
clearing and warmer temperatures
remain.
Stationary Front
Stationary front- when cold or
warm masses stay in place a long
time and do not move.
The weather will remain whatever
is around that front until the front
changes.
Occluded Fronts
A warm mass “wedges” between
two cold air masses.
The cold masses push the warm
mass upwards and then push
each other, resulting in cloudy,
rainy, or snowy weather/violent
forms.
12-8 Summary
Front- surface between two
different air masses.
Cold front- forward edge of a cold
air mass.
Warm front- forward edge of a
warm air mass.
12-8 Summary
Stationary front- forms when two
air masses meet and stay in one
place a while.
Movements of fronts causes
changes in weather.
12-8 Class Work
Complete Checking Concepts
and Thinking Critically.