its all about the amount of molecules rubbing together to form heat... bla bla bla...more pressure=more molecules
This is a very relative question, but in general, pressure and temperature are proportional. If you decrease the pressure of the system, the temperature will decrease as well.
High Pressure! That science unit has totally done me great!!
No. Cold air is heavier than warm air.
low pressure often brings rain and cold
hot
warm front is low pressure , cold front high pressure . because it pushes down on the surface (because cold air sinks) it makes high pressure .
The low pressure systems form at cold because it means badweather. It forms at warm because it collides with a warm air mass. It does that with a stationary front.!!!!
Depends if the air gets warm or cold
Cold is icicle-like triangles on a line, Warm is half circles on a line, Stationary fronts are both.
Cold air aloft is associated with a surface low pressure system. The reverse is true for warm air aloft. In a baroclinic low pressure system, the upper-level low/trough is usually situated over the cold air, while upper level highs/ridges are around warm air aloft.
It is moderatly warm in a low pressure system
When warm and cold fronts meet . ;{)
Cold air typically has higher pressure than warm air because cold air is denser and therefore exerts more pressure on its surroundings.
Low pressure centers are the zones of convergence of warm and cold currents.
warm front is low pressure , cold front high pressure . because it pushes down on the surface (because cold air sinks) it makes high pressure .
The low pressure systems form at cold because it means badweather. It forms at warm because it collides with a warm air mass. It does that with a stationary front.!!!!
high pressure,low pressure,cold front,warm front,warm air mass,cold air mass
Depends if the air gets warm or cold
Pressure differences between warm and cold air masses cause fronts or high/low pressure systems. A warm front is when a warm, moist air mass slides up and over a cold air mass, and a cold front is the opposite.
When cold air moves into an area, we have high atmospheric pressure; the cold air is denser than the warm air. Love, me :)
Cold is icicle-like triangles on a line, Warm is half circles on a line, Stationary fronts are both.
Cold air aloft is associated with a surface low pressure system. The reverse is true for warm air aloft. In a baroclinic low pressure system, the upper-level low/trough is usually situated over the cold air, while upper level highs/ridges are around warm air aloft.