Download, print and study this document offline |
Page 1 FRONTS When two different air masses meet, the boundary zone between them is called a front. The process of formation of the fronts is known as frontogenesis. Fronts are the typical features of midlatitudes weather (temperate region – 30° – 65° N and S). They are uncommon (unusual) in tropical and polar regions. The two air masses don’t merge readily due to the effect of the converging atmospheric circulation, relatively low diffusion coefficient and a low thermal conductivity. FRONT FORMATION The process of formation of a front is known as Frontogenesis and dissipation of a front is known as Frontolysis . Frontogenesis involves convergence of two distinct air masses. Frontolysis involves overriding of one of the air mass by another. NOTE: Mid-latitude cyclones or temperate cyclones or extra-tropical cyclones occur due to frontogenesis. TYPES OF FRONTS: There are four types of fronts: (a) Cold; (b) Warm; (c) Stationary; (d) Occluded Page 2 FRONTS When two different air masses meet, the boundary zone between them is called a front. The process of formation of the fronts is known as frontogenesis. Fronts are the typical features of midlatitudes weather (temperate region – 30° – 65° N and S). They are uncommon (unusual) in tropical and polar regions. The two air masses don’t merge readily due to the effect of the converging atmospheric circulation, relatively low diffusion coefficient and a low thermal conductivity. FRONT FORMATION The process of formation of a front is known as Frontogenesis and dissipation of a front is known as Frontolysis . Frontogenesis involves convergence of two distinct air masses. Frontolysis involves overriding of one of the air mass by another. NOTE: Mid-latitude cyclones or temperate cyclones or extra-tropical cyclones occur due to frontogenesis. TYPES OF FRONTS: There are four types of fronts: (a) Cold; (b) Warm; (c) Stationary; (d) Occluded STATIONARY FRONT When the front remains stationary, it is called a stationary front. Initially, the front is stationary. When the surface position of a front does not change (when two air masses are unable to push against each other; a draw), a stationary front is formed. Cumulonimbus clouds . Overrunning of warm air along such a front causes frontal precipitation. COLD FRONT When the cold air moves towards the warm air mass, its contact zone is called the cold front . Frontolysis begin when the warm air mass is completely uplifted by the cold air mass. Page 3 FRONTS When two different air masses meet, the boundary zone between them is called a front. The process of formation of the fronts is known as frontogenesis. Fronts are the typical features of midlatitudes weather (temperate region – 30° – 65° N and S). They are uncommon (unusual) in tropical and polar regions. The two air masses don’t merge readily due to the effect of the converging atmospheric circulation, relatively low diffusion coefficient and a low thermal conductivity. FRONT FORMATION The process of formation of a front is known as Frontogenesis and dissipation of a front is known as Frontolysis . Frontogenesis involves convergence of two distinct air masses. Frontolysis involves overriding of one of the air mass by another. NOTE: Mid-latitude cyclones or temperate cyclones or extra-tropical cyclones occur due to frontogenesis. TYPES OF FRONTS: There are four types of fronts: (a) Cold; (b) Warm; (c) Stationary; (d) Occluded STATIONARY FRONT When the front remains stationary, it is called a stationary front. Initially, the front is stationary. When the surface position of a front does not change (when two air masses are unable to push against each other; a draw), a stationary front is formed. Cumulonimbus clouds . Overrunning of warm air along such a front causes frontal precipitation. COLD FRONT When the cold air moves towards the warm air mass, its contact zone is called the cold front . Frontolysis begin when the warm air mass is completely uplifted by the cold air mass. Temperatures can drop more than 15 degrees within the first hour. Vertically developed clouds, such as cumulonimbus clouds, are common, with considerable turbulence and showery precipitation. WARM FRONT When warm air mass moves towards the cold air mass, the contact zone is a warm front. Frontolysis (front dissipation) begin when the warm air mass makes way for cold air mass on the ground, i.e. when the warm air mass completely sits over the cold air mass. Such fronts cause moderate to gentle precipitation over a large area, over several hours. The passage of warm front is marked by rise in temperature, pressure and change in weather. Because the frontal uplift is very gradual, clouds form slowly and turbulence is limited. High-flying cirrus clouds may signal the approaching front many hours before it arrives. As the front comes closer, the clouds become lower, thicker, and more extensive, typically developing into altocumulus or altostratus. Precipitation usually occurs broadly OCCLUDED FRONT Page 4 FRONTS When two different air masses meet, the boundary zone between them is called a front. The process of formation of the fronts is known as frontogenesis. Fronts are the typical features of midlatitudes weather (temperate region – 30° – 65° N and S). They are uncommon (unusual) in tropical and polar regions. The two air masses don’t merge readily due to the effect of the converging atmospheric circulation, relatively low diffusion coefficient and a low thermal conductivity. FRONT FORMATION The process of formation of a front is known as Frontogenesis and dissipation of a front is known as Frontolysis . Frontogenesis involves convergence of two distinct air masses. Frontolysis involves overriding of one of the air mass by another. NOTE: Mid-latitude cyclones or temperate cyclones or extra-tropical cyclones occur due to frontogenesis. TYPES OF FRONTS: There are four types of fronts: (a) Cold; (b) Warm; (c) Stationary; (d) Occluded STATIONARY FRONT When the front remains stationary, it is called a stationary front. Initially, the front is stationary. When the surface position of a front does not change (when two air masses are unable to push against each other; a draw), a stationary front is formed. Cumulonimbus clouds . Overrunning of warm air along such a front causes frontal precipitation. COLD FRONT When the cold air moves towards the warm air mass, its contact zone is called the cold front . Frontolysis begin when the warm air mass is completely uplifted by the cold air mass. Temperatures can drop more than 15 degrees within the first hour. Vertically developed clouds, such as cumulonimbus clouds, are common, with considerable turbulence and showery precipitation. WARM FRONT When warm air mass moves towards the cold air mass, the contact zone is a warm front. Frontolysis (front dissipation) begin when the warm air mass makes way for cold air mass on the ground, i.e. when the warm air mass completely sits over the cold air mass. Such fronts cause moderate to gentle precipitation over a large area, over several hours. The passage of warm front is marked by rise in temperature, pressure and change in weather. Because the frontal uplift is very gradual, clouds form slowly and turbulence is limited. High-flying cirrus clouds may signal the approaching front many hours before it arrives. As the front comes closer, the clouds become lower, thicker, and more extensive, typically developing into altocumulus or altostratus. Precipitation usually occurs broadly OCCLUDED FRONT If an air mass is fully lifted above the land surface, it is called the occluded front. Frontolysis begin when warm sector diminishes and the cold air mass completely undertakes the warm sector on ground. Weather along an occluded front is complex—a mixture of cold front type and warm front type weather. A combination of clouds formed at cold front and warm front.Read More
100 videos|76 docs
|
|
Explore Courses for UPSC exam
|