no
Yes,because a warm air mass,and a cool air mass mix together when they meet at fronts.
A stationary front is formed when a cold air mass and a warm air mass meet but neither can move the other. This results in a boundary where the two air masses remain in place, creating a mix of weather conditions along the front.
front
condensation of water , rain in fact
condensation of water , rain in fact
a tornado
A warm front is a front that is created when a warm air mass and a cold air mass meet but do not mix. The warm air mass slowly moves and catches up to the cold air mass and slowly crashes into it, then the warm air mass rises and rains. After a little while the air masses go away from each other. A cold front is created when a fast moving cold air mass colides with a slow moving warm air mass, the warm air mass rises, rains, and they go away from each other eventually.
A stationary front occurs when a warm air mass and a cold air mass meet but remain in place, leading to prolonged periods of rain or other forms of precipitation.
front apex(:
It depends on which air mass replaces which in the area. If a cold air mass advances and pushes a warm air mass away, the result is a cold front. When a cold air mass retreats and is replaced by a warm air mass, the result is a warm front. When the two air masses meet and neither advances, the result is a stationary front.
in between or around or near air masss or where they meet.
The location where two different air masses meet is called a front.