A front (or air mass), resulting in weather.
The location where two different air masses meet is called a front.
nope
A front is where air masses meet but don't mix, but only a stationary front is one where the air masses then don't move. A stationary front is when cold air meets warm air, but they do not advance toward or pass each other. The weather will be light wind and precipitation. Eventually, overtime, ONE air mass(Cold or Warm), will take over.
A weather front typically forms when both warm and cool air meet. Both the difference in air temperature, as well as the density of the air, can cause a front. Warm fronts are more slow moving than cold fronts and usually produce precipitation. Fronts are depicted on weather maps with arrows showing where the front has come from and what direction the front is moving.
a front
A day or weeks of cold, grey, rainy weather.
an occluded front?
when to air masses meet it's called a front.
A warm front forms.
warm and cold air masses meet
The point where these two air masses meet is called a front.If cold air advances and pushes away the warm air, it forms a cold front.When warm air advances, it rides up over the denser, cold air mass to form a warm front.If neither air mass advances, it forms a stationary front.
The location where two different air masses meet is called a front.
It is called a front.
cold and hot meet the region
The location where two different air masses meet is called a front.
because the region's continental climate creates an environment of extremes.
Two types of air masses are cold and warm air masses. When they meet each other, a front forms.