I believe it's the same as a cold front, between 20 and 40 miles per hour on average.
An occluded front occurs when a fast-moving cold front overtakes a slower-moving warm front, leading to the warm air being lifted and squeezed aloft, creating a mix of weather conditions such as rain, snow, and thunderstorms.
A front that does not move is called a stationary front. There is only 4 types of fronts. There's a startionary front, a occluded front, a cold front, and a warm front.
The region where a warm front and a cold front meet is called an occluded front. This occurs when a fast-moving cold front catches up to a slower-moving warm front, lifting the warm air mass off the ground. This creates a boundary where three air masses converge.
it is not a standard weather front
An occluded front is formed during the process of cyclogenesis when a cold front overtakes a warm front. When this occurs, the warm air is separated (occluded) from the cyclone center at the Earth's surface. The point where the warm front and the occluded front meet (and consequently the nearest location of warm air to the center of the cyclone) is called the triple point.
Warm front.
A front that does not move is called a stationary front. There is only 4 types of fronts. There's a startionary front, a occluded front, a cold front, and a warm front.
1. a cold front moves toward a warm front, forcing warm air aloft. 2. a cold front merges with the warm front to form an occluded front that drops heavy rains 3.because occluded fronts often move slowly, light precipitation can fall for several days
An occluded front occurs when a fast-moving cold front overtakes a slower-moving warm front, leading to the warm air being lifted and squeezed aloft, creating a mix of weather conditions such as rain, snow, and thunderstorms.
Before an occluded front, you may experience warm temperatures and possibly thunderstorms as warm air is lifted ahead of the front. After an occluded front passes, you can expect cooler temperatures, clearing skies, and a decrease in precipitation as the occluded front brings cooler air mass to the region.
An occluded front is formed during the process of cyclogenesis when a warm front is overtaken by a cold front.
In general, "occluded" means blocked or covered. In meteorology, it refers to a front where a cold front overtakes a warm front, resulting in the warm air being lifted off the ground and no longer in contact with the surface.
A front that does not move is called a stationary front. There is only 4 types of fronts. There's a startionary front, a occluded front, a cold front, and a warm front.
The region where a warm front and a cold front meet is called an occluded front. This occurs when a fast-moving cold front catches up to a slower-moving warm front, lifting the warm air mass off the ground. This creates a boundary where three air masses converge.
At an occluded front, rain or snow can fall. Hope this helps. =)
An occluded front.
The weather before an occluded front tends to be cold and wet. After the front, the temperature may warm or cool, but the air becomes dry.