Weather Fronts - OK-First
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| Weather Fronts
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| Principle | Fronts are zones of transition between two different air masses. The zone may be 20 miles across or it may be 100 miles across, but from one side of a front to the other, one clearly would sense that the properties of an air mass had changed significantly (e.g., contrasts in temperature and dew point, wind direction, cloud cover, and on-going weather). The frontal zone represents the leading edge of a wedge of cold/cool air. If the wedge is moving into an area of warmer air, the front is called a cold front. If the wedge is retreating and warmer air is moving into an area previously occupied by cool air, the front is termed a warm front. |
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| Figure 1 - Types of Fronts | |
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| Definition |
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| Figure 2 - Side View of a Typical Cold Front | |
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| Cold Fronts |
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| Figure 3 - Side View of a Typical Warm Front | |
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| Warm Fronts
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| Stationary Fronts |
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| Figure 4 - Development of an Occluded Front | |
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| Occluded Fronts |
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| End |
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| OK-FIRST Project, Oklahoma Climatological Survey, 100 East Boyd Street, Suite 1210, Norman, OK 73019. Copyright © 1996-2005 Oklahoma Climatological Survey. All Rights Reserved. Send comments or questions concerning OK-FIRST to [email protected] |
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