What Is Meteorology
What Is Meteorology
What Is Meteorology
The directions of Earths wind systems, such as the polar easterlies and the trade
winds, vary with the latitudes in which they occur.
1. The polar easterlies are the wind zones between 60 N latitude and the
north pole, and 60 S latitude and the south pole.
2. The prevailing westerlies are the wind systems on Earth located between
latitudes 30 N and 60 N, and 30 S and 60 S.
3. Between latitudes 30 N and the equator is a circulation belt of wind known
as the trade winds.
Trade winds
Near latitudes 30 N the sinking air creates an area of high pressure. This
results in a belt of weak surface winds called the horse latitudes. Trade winds
from the North and the South meet and join near the equator. The air is
forced upward, which creates an area of low pressure
called the intertropical convergence zone (ITCZ).
What are the four fronts?
A collision of two air masses forms a fronta narrow region between two air
masses of different densities.
Cold front: blue triangles on a line
Warm front: red half circles on a line.
Occluded front: pink triangle half circle triangle half circle pattern on a line
Stationary front: blue triangle on bottom red half circle on top
1. Cold front: When cold, dense air displaces warm air, it forces the warm air,
which is less dense, up along a steep slope. This type of collision is called a
cold front. Intense precipitation and sometimes thunderstorms.
2. Warm front: Advancing warm air displaces cold air along a warm front. A
warm front develops a gradual boundary slope. Widespread light precipitation
3. Stationary front: When two air masses meet but neither advances, the
boundary between them stalls. This stationary front frequently occurs
between two modified air masses that have small temperature and pressure
gradients between them. Sometimes light winds and precipitation
4. Occluded front: Sometimes, a cold air mass moves so rapidly that it
overtakes a warm front and forces the warm air upward. As the warm air is
lifted, the advancing cold air mass collides with the cold air mass in front of
the warm front. A warm air mass is squeezed upward between two cold air
masses. Strong winds and heavy precipitation
What are pressure systems?
Sinking or rising air, combined with the Coriolis effect, results in the formation
of rotating high- and low-pressure systems in the atmosphere.
1. Low pressure: In surface low-pressure systems, air rises. When air from
outside the system replaces the rising air, this air spirals inward toward
the center and then upward. Clouds and precipitation
2. High pressure: In a surface high-pressure system, sinking air moves away
from the systems center when it reaches Earths surface. Clear skies and
fair weather.