Air Mass + Frontal Depression
Air Mass + Frontal Depression
Air Mass + Frontal Depression
Frontal depression
An air mass is a large body of air, with a reasonably uniform temperature,
humidity and pressure. It can have a horizontal extension of thousands square
miles and adopts the characteristics of the surface below it. It acquires its
properties from the earth surface, while spending days to weeks over the same
part of the Earth. Air mass tends to move as a unit by itself. Once an air mass
moves out of its source region, it is modified as it encounters surface conditions
different than those found in the source region. Such as, if air mass near North
Pole moves southward, then it encounters warmer land masses and
consequently, it is heated by the ground below. Air masses typically collide in the
middle latitudes, produces various weathers.
The best source regions for air masses are large flat areas (over sea, land or ice
cap) with uniform temperature and light wind. This type of earth surface ensures
that the air remains in this area long time, to acquire the underlying surface
characteristics. The resulting air mass becomes virtually homogeneous
throughout and its properties become uniform at each level.
Polar region is the area of the globe, surrounding the poles. The North Pole and
South Pole being the centers, these regions are dominated by the polar ice caps,
covering Arctic Ocean and the continent of Antarctica. This region receives less
solar radiation, as the sun's energy arrives at an oblique angle, with more
absorption, scattering and reflection for longer distance through the Earth's
atmosphere.
It is the source region for Arctic air mass (A), Antarctic air mass (AA), Polar
Continental air mass (Pc) and Polar Maritime air mass (Pm),
1. Arctic air mass (A) is an air mass from the region, which is north of
the Arctic Circle (66° 33’N) and around the Earth's North Pole.
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(Approximate location for Arctic air mas is around 60o - 90o N). This area
includes the Arctic Ocean (which overlies the North Pole) and parts of
Canada, Greenland, Russia, Alaska, Iceland, Norway, Sweden and
Finland. It consists of a vast, ice-covered ocean. There is a
permanent high-pressure area in the vicinity of this area. In this region, a
gentle flow of air over the polar ice fields, allows an arctic air mass to form.
This air mass is characteristically dry aloft and very cold and stable in the
lower altitudes.
2. Antarctic air mass (AA) originates over the Antarctic ice-cap and
the surrounding ice shelves and pack ice. It is extremely cold and dry. Its
temperature is colder the arctic air mass. Approximate location for
Antarctic air mass is 60o - 90o S.
3. Continental polar air mass (cP) originates over the regions consist of
all land areas, dominated by the Canadian and Siberian high-
pressure cells. In the winter, these regions are covered by snow and ice.
Due to extreme cold and the absence of water bodies, very little moisture
is available here. So it is a cold and dry air mass, but warmer than the
arctic air mass located to the north.
N.B. The polar air masses do not include all the airs at the poles (some areas
are covered by Arctic air and Antarctic air). So polar air masses are generally
found in latitudes between 40 and 60 degrees.
4. Maritime polar air mass (mP) is the air mass originates on the
maritime polar source regions; consist of the open unfrozen polar sea
areas, in the vicinity of 60° latitude, north and south. It is a cool and moist
air and brings mild weather to coastal locations. Maritime polar air is
warmer than continental polar air in the winter, as the surface temperature
of the ocean is higher; similarly opposite phenomena happens during the
summer
Tropical region is seated in the equatorial regions of the world, are limited in
latitudes by 23°26'N of northern hemisphere and 23°26'S of southern
hemisphere.
It is the source regions for Continental tropical air mass (cT) and Maritime
tropical air mass (mT). Approximate location for these Tropical air masses are
15o to 35o N or S.
Equatorial region is the area at approximately equidistant from the North Pole
and South Pole, which divides the Earth into Northern Hemisphere and Southern
Hemisphere. Here the temperatures are higher year round, with some exceptions
during the wet seasons. Convergence of the trade winds from both hemispheres
and the intense insolation over this region, causes lifting of the unstable, moist air
to high levels. The surface of the Earth at the equator is mostly ocean. It is the
source regions for Equatorial air mass (E).
1. Equatorial air mass (E) is warm and has high moisture content.
Approximate location for Equatorial air mass is 15o N to 15o S.
1. Cold air mass: whose temperature near the surface is below the
temperature of the underlying land or sea surface. It may come from polar
region and normally moves toward lower latitude.
2. Warm air mass: whose temperature near the surface is above the
temperature of the underlying land or sea surface. It is usually of tropical
origin and normally moves toward higher latitudes.
Fronts are generally moves with winds movements, but do not move as quickly
as wind. In the Northern Hemisphere Cold fronts and occluded fronts usually
travel from the northwest to southeast and warm fronts travel from southwest to
northeast. In the Southern Hemisphere, the reverse happens. This movement is
caused by the pressure gradient force (horizontal differences in atmospheric
pressure) and the Coriolis effect. Frontal zones can be slowed down by
geographic features, like mountains and large bodies of warm water.
Cold front devolves, when cold air mass replaces relatively warm air mass. After
cold front passes over a place, the temperature becomes lower then it was
before. Cold fronts can move up to twice as fast and produce sharper changes
in weather than warm fronts. On weather maps, the surface position of the cold
front is marked with the symbol of a blue line of triangle-shapes, pointing in the
direction of travel.
Warm front devolves, when warm air mass replaces relatively cold air mass.
After cold front passes over a place, the temperature becomes higher then it was
before. A warm front moves more slowly than the cold front, because cold air is
denser and harder to remove from the earth's surface. On weather maps, the
Stationary front is a non-moving boundary between two air masses; both are
not strong enough to replace each other. They tend to remain essentially in the
same area for extended periods of time, usually moving in waves. Stationary
fronts are marked on weather maps with alternating red half-circles and blue
spikes, pointing in opposite directions, indicating no significant movement.
Occluded front is formed, when a cold front overtakes a warm front. It lies within
a sharp trough, but the air mass behind the boundary can be either warm or cold.
Occluded fronts are indicated on a weather map by a purple line with alternating
half-circles and triangles pointing in direction of travel. Occluded fronts usually
form around mature low-pressure areas.
Warming, then
Temperature Steady or slow rise Warming
leveling off
Usually none,
Showers, snow, sleet,
Precipitation Light drizzle sometimes light
or drizzle
rain or showers
Cirrus, cirrostratus,
Clearing with
altostratus,
Clouds Low Nimbostratus. scattered stratus.
nimbostratus in
succession.
Good, during
Visibility Poor, but improving Poor or hazy
precipitation poor
Dew Point Steady rise Steady Rise, then steady
Lowest, then
Pressure Decreasing steadily Increasing steadily
sudden increase
Depressions are formed at the boundary between two different air masses. This
depression is normally associated with cloudy, rainy and windy weather. This
occurs, when warm air is forced to rise over cold air. Here warm air is traveling
faster than cold air or warm air travels in opposite direction, which are described
as below,
--------------------------------------- Or -------------------------------------
Since this depression is formed at frontal area of different air masses, it is also
known as Frontal depression. The formation process of this depression is
called Frontogeneses; similarly decay or weakening of a depression is called
Frontolysis. On a weather chart (synoptic or prognostic) a depression appears as
a set of closed curved isobars, with wind circulation anticlockwise in the northern
hemisphere (as below diagram), clockwise in the southern hemisphere.
1st stage (Figure 1) : Two different air masses are traveling at opposite
directions. They meet along a line, which is called frontal boundary.
4th stage (Figure 4) : The cycle is completed and the depression is formed,
with wind circulation anticlockwise and inward direction to low pressure (as it is
for northern hemisphere)
Family of depression:
2. Cold occlusion: In a cold occlusion (figure 2), the less cold air mass, which
is ahead of the warm front, rides over the very cold air mass, while lifting
the warm air mass. After passage of cold occlusion, the air temperature
becomes lower then the before.
Dry line or Dew Point Front is a boundary, which separates a moist air mass
from a dry air mass. Here a sharp change in dew point temperature is also
observed. These are most commonly found at places like Rocky Mountains (east
side of it), Texas, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Kansas etc.
At night and early morning, fog and low-level clouds are often existed on the
moist side of the line, while generally clear skies are marked at the dry side.