The warm air usually originates from a tropical or subtropical latitude, usually from over a warm body of water such as the Gulf of Mexico.
because when you take a warm shower, the air in your shower is really warm, and when you come out, the air (which is at room temperature) seems really cold compared to the air in your shower, so you get goosebumbs.
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.
yes it is true
The cool air sinks, while the warm air rises. If it does so with enough force and torque, a tornado or hurricane will form.
The warm, moist air involved in tornado formation usually comes from a warm body of water. For the United States it is usually the Gulf of Mexico.
The air comes from the air outside and the air conditioning system in the car turns this into cold or warm air.
Not Normally, usually when warm fronts heat the air up, when cold fronts come around, that is the front that normally is associated with clouds and rain. When warm and cold air collide, that's when the development of storms come around.
That depends. If the cold air pushes into the warm air, moving it out of the way it is called a cold front. If the cold air retreats with warm air coming in to to replace it, the front is a warm front. if the two air masses come together along a boundary that does not move the result is a stationary front.
Sounds like your fan control on setting is set to low.
The cold air pushes under the warm air.
I pushes the warm air upwards.