Cold front
Cold front.
When a cold front moves through, the cold air mass acts like a wedge, lifting warmer air off the ground. If there is enough moisture and instability in the warm air mass, some of it may become freely buoyant and rise to form thunderstorms.
No. A cold front is a boundary between two large-scale air masses where a cold air mass pushes into and displaces a warmer air mass. Thunderstorms often form along cold fronts, and these storms occasionally produce tornadoes.
Cold air has little moisture, warm air has lots. When cold air runs into warm air then the warm air is pushed up until the moisture in the air gets cold enough to form rain
The form overlow latitude oceans
Cold front.
The leading edge of a mass of air with certain, uniform moisture and temperature characteristics is called a front. i.e. The leading edge of a relatively warm air mass is called a warm front. The leading edge of a cooler air mass is called a cold front.
It keeps moving forward or moves with the cold air it depends
It is called a "cold front. It is the leading edge of a cooler mass of air that is replacing a warmer mass of air at ground level.
a lightning form when cold air mass pushes warm air mass up because of this hard reaction it forms lightning. this is called cold air mass.
No. The warm air mass always rises above the cold air mass. And if the cold air is advancing, that makes it a cold front.
A cold front is a condition where the leading edge of a cooler mass of air replaces the ground air which is warmer. Therefore one can't expect to see the cold front itself but only its result when it starts to form as the wake of an extratropical cyclone which is visible as bad weather.
a cold front forms by cold air mass pushes under a warm air mass
mt air mass
When a cold front moves through, the cold air mass acts like a wedge, lifting warmer air off the ground. If there is enough moisture and instability in the warm air mass, some of it may become freely buoyant and rise to form thunderstorms.
Not directly. When a cold air mass plows into a warm air mass it produces a cold front. Thunderstorms can form along cold fronts. Given a few other conditions these thunderstorms can produce tornadoes.
No. A cold front is a boundary between two large-scale air masses where a cold air mass pushes into and displaces a warmer air mass. Thunderstorms often form along cold fronts, and these storms occasionally produce tornadoes.