Making The Weather!
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Transcript Making The Weather!
Making The
Weather!
Pressure and Fronts
Let’s get it started!!
So . . . . A couple questions for you . . . .
Brainstorm this with your table mates. . . . .
What causes the weather?
Any idea?
It’s not any easy question.
But, we’ll say this – the weather on Earth starts with the sun.
The sun causes water to evaporate and air to move. Those
two things help create our weather.
Under pressure!!
Much of the weather we experience each day is because of
air pressure.
Yes . . . . Air pressure. The air that surrounds you – even
though you can’t see it – has weight! And it’s pressing on
you! Even right now!!
Your body doesn’t collapse because there is air inside you
pushing outward just as hard as the air outside you is
pressing inward!!
Air Pressure & The Weather
Air acts differently when it is under different amounts of
pressure.
Air masses – or systems – are large masses or air that have
similar qualities. And they move around!
High Pressure System
Air pressure is greater than air pressure around it
High pressure air pushes into areas of low pressure
This gets the air moving and causes winds!!
Cool, dry air
Take it down low!!
Low Pressure Systems
These air masses have lower air pressure – and less density -
than high pressure air masses.
They get pushed around by high pressure systems!
Low pressure air is warmer and also carries more water
vapor.
When high pressure air pushes low pressure air around, it
usually goes UPWARD, taking the water vapor with it to form
clouds and, eventually, rain!!
Don’t be frontin’!!
When we try to predict the weather, we pay attention to
these air masses as the move around.
When one air mass hits another air mass, it creates what
we call a front. A front is simply the boundary between
two air masses where they meet.
We are concerned with two kinds of fronts and the
weather they create:
Cold Fronts
Warm Fronts
Stop (Cold) Frontin’!!
A cold front happens when a cold air masses moves into – and
underneath - a warm air mass.
Because the cold air mass is denser, it pushes the warm air mass
out of the way.
The warm air gets pushed UPWARD.
Guess what . . . . That warm air is carrying lots of water vapor
and, when it gets pushed upwards, it forms lots of
cummulonimbus clouds and we get rain!!
We usually see a DROP in temperature after the front moves
through.
Cold Fronts
More Cold Fronts
Cold Front On The Map
A cold front – on a weather map – is usually marked with a
blue line. The teeth point in the direction the air is
traveling.
Stop (Warm) Frontin’!!
A warm front happens when a warm air mass meets a cold
air mass and pushes over it.
Remember – the warm is less dense than the cold air. It
cannot push it aside, so it flows up and over it.
With a warm front, you might see some cirrus clouds –
which, remember, forecast a change in the weather – and
some light precipitation.
After the warm front pushes through, the temperature will
rise!
Warm Fronts!
Another Warm Front!
Warm Front On The Map
A warm front – on a weather map – is usually marked with
a red line. The dots point in the direction the air is
traveling.
Were you payin’ ‘tention?
What causes water to evaporate and air to move?
High pressure air likes to move into spaces where low
pressure air is. True/False
Which air mass carries more water vapor – cold or warm?
High pressure air masses produce nice weather. True/False
A cold front usually produces what kind of weather?
A warm front usually produces what kind of weather?