cunomibious
cold front
A cold front is formed. Yes a cold front is formed, but this could also come to mean that a cold front overtakes a warm front which means a new front would be formed called an occluded front.
No, a cloud formed in hot air is not denser than a cloud formed in cold air. Cloud formation is primarily determined by the saturation level of air, where warm air can hold more water vapor before condensation occurs. The density of the cloud itself depends more on the amount of water droplets or ice crystals present rather than the temperature of the air in which it formed.
An Occluded front.
A warm front forms when a warm air mass meets a cooler air mass. As the warm air rises over the cool air, it produces widespread cloud cover and precipitation. Warm fronts typically result in a more gradual change in weather compared to cold fronts.
If you mean when a mass of cold air meets a mass of warm air, then a front is created.
A dense vertical cloud associated with thunderstorms formed from water vapour carried by powerful upward currents of air. They normally form along a cold front and bring severe weather including lightning and hail
When a warm front and a cold front get close, the warm air rises over the denser cold air, causing it to cool quickly and condense into clouds. This interaction can lead to the formation of precipitation and potentially severe weather.
Stationary Front
Stationary Front
occluded front
As a cold front approaches, cloud coverage typically increases, often resulting in the development of cumulonimbus clouds and potential precipitation. Once the cold front passes, the cloud coverage may decrease as the cooler air displaces the warmer, moist air that was creating the clouds.