Chapter 3 Section 1 Questions #1-23

  1. An air mass can cover millions of square kilometers and be up to 10 kilometers high.
  2. Maritime polar air masses, continental polar air masses, maritime tropical air masses, and continental tropical air masses all affect the weather in North America.
  3. Maritime Tropical air masses form over the Pacific Ocean. They bring warm, humid air to the East coast.
  4. In the summer, maritime tropical air masses bring hot, humid weather, including summer showers and thunderstorms. In the winter, they often bring heavy rain or snow.
  5. Maritime polar air masses often bring fog, rain, and cool temperatures to the West Coast.
  6. Continental tropical air masses usually form in the Southwestern part of the United States.
  7. Continental tropical air masses generally bring hot, dry weather.
  8. Continental polar air masses form over central and northern Canada and Alaska. They bring clear, cold, dry weather.
  9. When Maritime tropical air masses collide with Continental polar air masses, they form storms, especially during the summer.
  10. Air masses in North America are moved by the prevailing westerlies, which moves air masses in an eastern direction.
  11. Air masses don’t mix easily because one is usually less dense than the other. This is analogous to oil and vinegar.
  12. Warm air is less dense than cool air. The less dense cool air will sink underneath the warm air and form a cold front.
  13. Fronts have very variable weather that often includes storms.
  14. A typical front is 15-200 kilometers wide and extends up to 10 kilometers high.
  15. The four types of fronts are cold fronts, warm fronts, stationary fronts, and occluded fronts.
  16. A cold front is produced when cold air moves underneath warm air, forcing the latter to rise.
  17. If there is a lot of moisture in the warm air in a cold front, heavy rains often occur. If there is not much moisture in the warm air, there may only be some cloudy skies.
  18. A stationary front is produced when two meeting air masses do not have enough force to move each other, and face each other in a “stand-off”. These fronts usually create rain, snow, fog, or clouds.
  19. An occluded front is when two cool air masses squeeze a warm air mass between them, forcing the warm air mass up until it is cut off from the ground. Occluded fronts may lead to cloudy weather, and eventually rain or snow.
  20. A cyclone is a swirling center of low air pressure. Cyclonic winds spin counterclockwise. As previously mentioned, they associated with low pressure.
  21. Cyclones are associated with storms and precipitation.
  22. An anticyclone is the opposite of a cyclone: it is a high pressure center of dry air that spins clockwise outward. They are usually associated with high pressure.