polar; subtropical
Winter brings the shortest days and the least daylight ... in either hemisphere.
It brings fresh water into the water bodies. It changes weather conditions.
An air mass usually brings weather of its source region.
The cloudy weather brings us cool weather because of the air without air we will die.
Stationary front
A High Pressure system, which rotates clockwise in the northern hemisphere.
spring equinox
low
Winter brings the shortest days and the least daylight ... in either hemisphere.
A low pressure system is a whirling mass of warm, moist air that generally brings stormy weather with strong winds. When viewed from above, winds spiral into a low-pressure center in a counterclockwise rotation in the Northern Hemisphere.
The autumnal equinox brings the fall season to the Northern Hemisphere on: September 22 each year.
It brings fresh water into the water bodies. It changes weather conditions.
It is the tilting of the earth on its axis, as it orbits the sun, that brings the four seasons to either the northern hemisphere or the southern hemisphere in their turn.
The North Atlantic Current brings warmer weather to Europe (typically Western Europe but also Northern Europe).
A falling barometer brings colder, and more severe weather conditions. For example: rain, snow, thunderstorms, hailstorms, etc.A falling barometer brings colder,and more sever weather conditions.for example:rain,snow,thunderstorms,hailstorm.
High pressure brings clear weather and low pressure brings precipitous weather. (rain, snow, hail, sleet, etc.)
No. An anticyclone is a large scale high pressure system that generally brings calm, sunny weather. Anticyclones rotate clockwise in the northern hemisphere and counterclockwise in the southern. Tornadoes have more in common with cyclones than they do with anticyclones. A tornado is a violently rotating column of air extending from the base of a thunderstorm to the ground. In weather terms it is a small scale vortex. Tornadoes generate intense low pressure and, about 99% of the time the rotate counterclockwise in the northern hemisphere and clockwise in the southern. In this sense they are similar to cyclones, though on a much smaller scale.