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yes it is "A front is a boundary between air masses" -science book
there is direct relationship between irradiance and air temp.
Tornadoes form most often when warm moist air collides either cool air or dry air. This produces thunderstorms. Other conditions are needed for those storms to produce tornadoes.
air masses with different characteristics such as temperature and humidity do not usually mix. so when two different air masses meet a boundary forms between them.
The warm air is pushed up and the temperature rises
Air masses are not involved in typhoons because these are tropical storms, as opposed to mid-latitude cyclones. The air in these storms is homogeneously tropical.
Storms are caused by the collision of air masses that have different temperatures and humidities.
Snow storms occur when air masses come together and start interacting with each other. :)
When cold air masses from the north meet warm moist air masses from the south, violent storms can occur.
Dramatic change in temperature and storms.
because the region's continental climate creates an environment of extremes.
yes it is "A front is a boundary between air masses" -science book
The boundary between stalled air masses is called a stationary front.
The ocean coast does not often have the collision between air masses that forms tornadoes. However, tropical storms can produce tornadoes when they come ashore.
They are both boundaries that occur most often between a front and an air mass.
A front forms when 2 air masses meet.
air masses when pressured have the boundary between called the front. By: Sigalit Migirov