A hurracan or a storm.
Clouds Rain
Tornadoes often, though not always, form along weather fronts, where air masses of differing characteristics collide. The fronts that most commonly produce tornadoes are cold fronts and dry lines.
Tornadoes are most often associated with cold fronts, but they also frequently form along dry lines and occasionally along warm fronts. Some tornadoes, such as those spawned by hurricanes, form in the absence of any front.
Yes, cumulonimbus clouds are often associated with warm fronts. As warm air rises over a colder air mass along a warm front, it can lead to the development of cumulonimbus clouds and potentially thunderstorms.
Along fronts low pressure systems form. Depending on what type of front it is, the air pressure will drastically increase or decrease. Because the front is the edge of an incoming air mass, precipitation occurs often ahead of the front. Fronts of incoming air masses are subject to prevailing winds, and are influenced in direction. Often, clouds form along fronts, which is why when a front has passed in there has been rain, or snow, or any other form of precipitation.
Warm fronts are fronts that are typically called warm fronts
Generally not. The storms that produce tornado form more often along cold fronts than warm fronts. So more often the weather is hot before a tornado and cooler afterwards.
Tornadoes are not a direct product of fronts but rather of thunderstorms. The storms that produce tornadoes most commonly occur along a cold front or dry line, but can be associated with stationary fronts or, less often, warm fronts. Some tornadic storms develop in the absence of any fronts.
Yes. Tornadoes most often are produced by the thunderstorms that form along cold fronts.
Thunderstorms and tornadoes most often form along cold fronts but they can form along dry lines and, on rare occasions, warm fronts. Some may form in the absence of any front.
Precipitation typically forms along both warm and cold fronts. Along a warm front, precipitation is usually light and steady, while along a cold front, precipitation is often more intense and short-lived.
Severe thunderstorms often form along cold fronts, though not always.