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when cold air and warm air fall into each others place
Not necessarily. A collision of warm and cold air will often produce thunderstorms, but other conditions are needed for those storms to produce tornadoes. Additionally, tornadoes can form from thunderstorms produced by other circumstances.
1) Warm front - warm air mass replacing a cold air mass at ground level. Typically shifts wind southeasterly to southwesterly. 2) Cold front - Cold air replacing warm air at ground level. Tyoically shifts southwesterly to northwesterly 3) Stationary front - Equal amount of energy between warm and cold air masses creating a "stalemate".
Generally not. Tornadoes and other severe weather are more often associated with cold fronts.
Warm anc cold air colliding are not a direct cause of tornadoes, but they can be a step in the process. where they come from depends on the region the weater system is in. But normally the warm air comes from a warm part of the ocean while the cold air comes from a cold region. In the Central United States, for example, the warm air comes from the Gulf of Mexico while the cold air comes from Canada.
Occluded front
Stationary Front
No. Because of the manner in which frontal systems operate, a cold front will overtake a warm front to form an occluded front.
The warm and the cold air collide violently with each other
A cold front occurs when a cold air and a cold air mass hits each other and the warm air rises
Cold Blooded and Warm blooded animals have a common trait with each other, they both have red blood
A warm front is a front that is created when a warm air mass and a cold air mass meet but do not mix. The warm air mass slowly moves and catches up to the cold air mass and slowly crashes into it, then the warm air mass rises and rains. After a little while the air masses go away from each other. A cold front is created when a fast moving cold air mass colides with a slow moving warm air mass, the warm air mass rises, rains, and they go away from each other eventually.
A stationery front. A cold front is where cold air gains over warm air. Warm front is where warm air gains over cold air. An Occluded front is where warm air is pushed up and cold aair over takes at lower levels.
Stationary
A stationary front.
A stationary front.
It is when two air masses meet. For example, Warm air rises and condenses into clouds when a warm front and a cold front bumps into each other.