it means the different type of weather its gonna have during the seasons...
That depends upon the type of metal you are using, but something along the lines of 1x10^-5 m/s is alright
If you meant weathering that is caused by water; physical weathering is the answer.
No . it will be cold tomorrow and cold in the afternoon
This type of heat transfer is called conduction. The transfer is from the warm hand to cool water.
There are warm and cold weather fronts
Generally cold fronts bring thunderstorms.
warm
Severe weather is most likely to occur along a cold front.
Cold fronts are most commonly associated with violent weather, such as thunderstorms, heavy rain, strong winds, and sometimes tornadoes. When a cold front meets warm, moist air, it can create instability in the atmosphere leading to intense weather conditions.
It depends on how cold fronts and warm fronts come together in an area. For example: In New Orleans, it is a dense area and warms + cold fronts meet and cause a hurricane. (I don't mean to offend anyone from or anyone who live there.)
Lines with tiny triangles on one side on a weather map represent cold fronts. Cold fronts mark the boundary where a cold air mass is advancing and displacing warmer air. This can lead to the formation of storms and changes in weather conditions.
A cold front typically has the steepest frontal surface compared to warm fronts and stationary fronts. Cold fronts are associated with intense weather phenomena, such as thunderstorms and heavy rain, due to the rapid lifting of warm air ahead of the advancing cold air mass.
Violent storms typically form from cold fronts, where a colder air mass is advancing towards and displacing a warmer air mass. The rapid lifting of warm, moist air along the cold front can lead to the development of thunderstorms and severe weather. Additionally, stationary fronts and occluded fronts can also trigger violent storms under the right atmospheric conditions.
Fronts mark boundaries between air masses with different temperatures and humidity levels. The movement of fronts can indicate the direction in which weather systems will move and the type of weather they will bring, such as precipitation and temperature changes. By tracking the movement of fronts, meteorologists can make more accurate forecasts about upcoming weather conditions.
In meteorology, a front is a boundary between two air masses, which can't mix each other due to their properties like their temperature, their pressure and their relative humidity. A front is associated with a low pressure system, a system where the atmospheric pressure is lower than the surrounding areas. There are several types of fronts, which have different properties in the cloud and precipitation formation such as the warm fronts, the cold fronts, the stationary fronts, the occluded fronts and some others. A warm front is a type of meteorological front where the warm air mass comes up on the cold air mass. The warm, light and dilated air goes over the cold, heavy and dense air. The warm front is associated with covered weather and sometimes rainy, usually with high clouds such as cirrus which will become nimbostratus or altostratus. A warm front is associated with warm, cloudy weather (sometimes moderated rainy) and with an atmospheric pressure decreasing progressively. A cold front is a type of meteorological front where the cold air mass comes down under the warm air mass. The cold, heavy and dense air goes under the warm, light and dilated air. The cold front is generally associated with cirrocumulus and altocumulus and the clouds are rarely high in the sky. Behing a cold front, there is clear skies and sunny weather because there is usually a high pressure system behind a cold front. But clear skies also follow warm fronts. Cold fronts tend to move faster than warm fronts because the cold air is denser than the warm air and is harder to move. Globally, all the fronts are associated by a change in the weather, which is more brutal in cold fronts than in warm fronts.
The four types of fronts change the weather on Earth. A warm front brings warm, humid air and a cold front brings dry, cool air. A stationary front does not move and have winds parallel to the front. An occluded front occurs when cold air overtakes warm air.