A front, or boundary between two air masses, is typically characterized by clouds and precipitation. The amount and type of precipitation typically depends on the temperature and moisture difference between the two air masses. Generally speaking, stronger temperature/moisture differences mean more clouds and precipitation.
A stationary front is a boundary between two air masses that has little to no movement. It typically results in long periods of cloudy and rainy weather in the area where it is positioned.
When two cool air masses cut off a warm air mass from the ground, a stationary front forms. Stationary fronts occur when the boundary between two air masses stalls and neither one advances. This can lead to prolonged periods of cloudy, rainy weather.
The space between two air masses is referred to as a front. Fronts are categorized by which kind of air mass, warm or cold, is replacing the other. +++ IT's not really a "space" between the air masses - that would be a vacuum! Rather, it's a somewhat diffuse boundary.
A convergent boundary occurs when two plates move toward each other. This movement can result in subduction, where one plate is forced beneath the other, or it can create mountain ranges and volcanic activity.
The kind of plate boundary where one lithospheric plate slides under another is a convergent boundary. This process is called subduction.
Stormy weather often occurs along the boundary between air masses or in association with a low pressure system.
Weather that occurs on Jupiter is basically the same as the weather on Earth
cold weather
transform boundary
hi
A stationary front is a boundary between two air masses that has little to no movement. It typically results in long periods of cloudy and rainy weather in the area where it is positioned.
a mountainous one.
cool weather
Every kind of weather happens on earth, from droughts and heat waves to blizzards and cyclones.
transform fault boundary
Compressional stresses occur at convergent plate boundaries.
fog