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Chapter 20

Chapter 20. Weather Patterns. This Week’s Weather – 5/4/14. Section 1: Air Masses. Changes in weather patterns are caused by the movement of air masses An air mass is a large body of air with similar temperatures and amounts of moisture at a given altitude

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Chapter 20

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  1. Chapter 20 Weather Patterns

  2. This Week’s Weather – 5/4/14

  3. Section 1: Air Masses • Changes in weather patterns are caused by the movement of air masses • An air mass is a large body of air with similar temperatures and amounts of moisture at a given altitude • Weather inside the area with the air mass will be different from weather outside of the air mass • As it moves, the characteristics of the air mass change and so does the weather in the area that the mass moves over

  4. Types of air masses • Air masses are classified by their temperature and the area where they form • Polar air masses are cold • Tropical air masses are warm • Continental air masses form over land • Maritime air masses form over water

  5. Types of Air Masses • There are 4 basic types of air masses • Continental polar air mass is dry and cool • Continental tropical air mass is dry and warm • Maritime polar air mass is wet and very cold • Maritime tropical air mass is wet and hot • Most of the weather in the eastern United States is affected by continental polar and maritime tropical air masses

  6. Section 2: Fronts • A front is a boundary that forms when two air masses meet • A warm front forms when warm air moves into an area formerly covered by cool air • Brings precipitation and warmer weather • A cold from forms when cold air moves into an area formerly covered by warm air • Cold fronts bring more violent, windy weather and leave clear skies when they pass • Stationary fronts form when cold and warm air masses move next to each other • Stationary fronts bring light precipitation • Occluded fronts form when a cold air mass over takes a warm air mass • Precipitation forms when warm air is forced upward

  7. Warm Front

  8. Cold Front

  9. Stationary Front

  10. Occluded Front

  11. Cyclones • Middle latitude cyclones are large centers of low pressure that travel from west to east and cause stormy weather • A cold front moves toward a warm front, forcing warm air up • The cold front merges with the warm front forming an occluded front that drops heavy rains • Occluded fronts move slowly causing several days of light rain

  12. Mid Latitude Cyclones

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