It's a cold front.
A front where warmer air is replacing colder air is called a warm front. Warm fronts typically bring gentler weather conditions, such as a gradual increase in temperature, light rain or drizzle, and overcast skies.
When a warm front passes it leaves behind hotter tempatures and more humidity, it is replacing the cold air with warm air basically.
Exactly. the colder air is lifted up over the wedge of warmer air at an angle.
The type of front that occurred between 41 degrees F and 34 degrees F depends on the direction of the front. If the front is headed toward warmer air with colder air behind it, it is a cold front. If the front is headed toward colder air with warmer air behind it, it is a warm front. If the front is just sitting there, it is a stationary front. The temperature does not matter.
The air that holds the most moisture in their air hole is warmer.
Depends on which temperature it held to start with. In a Sauna exhaled air will be colder, in a walk-in freezer exhaled air will be warmer. How about in a lift? Where isn't a relevant factor, only ambient temperature is. If the ambient temperature is colder than body core temperature, then exhaled air will be warmer. If ambient temperature is warmer than body core temperature then exhaled air will be colder.
When a warm front passes it leaves behind hotter tempatures and more humidity, it is replacing the cold air with warm air basically.
Exactly. the colder air is lifted up over the wedge of warmer air at an angle.
A front is an area of unsettled weather. In front of a cold front is warmer air. Behind a cold front is colder air. As the colder air meets the warmer air, the cold air rides over the warmer air and causes condensation. Rain happens. Since conditions are unsettled, winds blow. The warm air fights back. Sometimes tornadoes form. The cold front either wins and goes forward or collapses.
The transition zone where a cold air mass is replacing a warmer air mass.
The type of front that occurred between 41 degrees F and 34 degrees F depends on the direction of the front. If the front is headed toward warmer air with colder air behind it, it is a cold front. If the front is headed toward colder air with warmer air behind it, it is a warm front. If the front is just sitting there, it is a stationary front. The temperature does not matter.
I would think in warmer Air....
If air is holding as much moisture as it can, colder air holds less than warmer.
No, cold air pushes up warmer air because the warmer air is less dense.
Air Currents
The air that holds the most moisture in their air hole is warmer.
Warm front form when air mass approaches a colder air mas. The warmer air lifts up and over the colder air.The first signs of the warm front are the cirrus clouds, followed by the cirrostratus, altostratus,and types of clouds.
colder, the farther up you go, the lower the tempurature