A cold front is composed of cold, dense air that moves in to replace warm air. This often leads to unstable atmospheric conditions and can result in precipitation and strong winds.
The Continental Polar is composed of cold dry air.
Continental polar is indicated by composed of cold dry air.
No, They can be COLD, WET; COLD,DRY; WARM, WET; or WARM, DRY.
yes
The cold air is dry as it contains less moisture. In winter there is a lot of snowfall but the air is dry. That is because the snow is extracted from the humidity in the air. As you cannot inhale condensed forms of liquids, it makes your mucus membranes dry.
The Continental Polar is composed of cold dry air.
Continental polar is indicated by composed of cold dry air.
A maritime polar air mass is composed of cold, moist air.
No, They can be COLD, WET; COLD,DRY; WARM, WET; or WARM, DRY.
yes
Yes, the air behind a cold front is generally colder than the air preceding it. It can also be drier as cold fronts tend to bring in cooler, more dense air which has a lower capacity to hold moisture.
The cold air is dry as it contains less moisture. In winter there is a lot of snowfall but the air is dry. That is because the snow is extracted from the humidity in the air. As you cannot inhale condensed forms of liquids, it makes your mucus membranes dry.
Cold dry air
cold air sinks as denser - warm air rises
No, dry air is caused by a lack of moisture in the air. It can happen in warm or cold air.
Continental polar masses are cold and dry air masses because the cold air cannot hold much moisture. As they move into warmer air, they can trigger precipitation.
An Arctic cold front.