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Fronts become stationary because the stationary front is like a stand-off between a cold front and a warm front. The warm front is trying to get on top of the warm front and make a warm front, while the cold front tried to avance on the warm front. Neither are successful, so they just stand there waiting for each other to move and one to become dominant. They stay where they are until one other front pushes them away.
This would most likely be a warm front. This is where a warm air mass wedges under a cold air mass. This occurs over a large distance. As the warm air rises, it condensates and forms rainclouds. Warm fronts are not as windy as their cold front counterparts, occurring on the polar end of the subpolar low pressure systems, resulting in the rainiy conditions dominating for days at a time.
A Low Pressure System allows clouds to form. It is possible that the clouds can stick around for several days in this type of system.
Stationary Front
the entire sky is filled with clouds
stationary fronts would most likely be responsible for several days of rain and clouds.
stationary fronts would most likely be responsible for several days of rain and clouds.
stationary fronts would most likely be responsible for several days of rain and clouds.
stationary fronts would most likely be responsible for several days of rain and clouds.
stationary fronts would most likely be responsible for several days of rain and clouds.
stationary fronts would most likely be responsible for several days of rain and clouds.
When a warm or cold front stops moving, it becomes a stationary front. Once this boundary resumes its forward motion, it once again becomes a warm front or cold front. Stationary fronts may bring several days of clouds and precipitation as air is constantly forced to rise, and multiple low pressure systems can move over the frontal boundary bringing with it rain, snow, and potentially wind.
Warm fronts give rain and clouds, cold fronts cause skies to clear , together they cause tornado's and big storms. When a warm front moves in, the cold air is pushed up. There are clouds and possibly rain, then the opposite happens when a cold front moves in. Cold fronts move under and overtake the warm mass and go underneath. This causes the skies to clear because of the rapid change in air temperature. ANOTHER ANSWER. So basically, a warm front can bring hours or days of wet weather and steady rain. A cold front can bring thunderstorms and even tornadoes. A stationary front can bring light wind and precipitation.
Cold weather front have low pressure air and rain/snow/hail/tornadoes and even hurricanes depending on location. Cold fronts bring huge, towering, billowing clouds [Cumulonimbus] that bring thunderstorms. Warm weather fronts bring gentle precipitation and high pressure air. Warm weather fronts also bring sheetlike clouds [Stratus] and wispy clouds [Cirrus] On the other hand, when there is no front, puffy white clouds [Cumulus] come on fair sunny days.
A stationary front will bring several days of cloudy, wet weather.
A stationary front will bring several days of cloudy, wet weather.
A stationary front will bring several days of cloudy, wet weather.