QUESTION IMAGE
Question
drag the tiles to the correct boxes to complete the pairs.
air masses are huge expanses of air that form from differential heating in the atmosphere. the boundary between two air masses is called a weather front. fronts can create particular types of weather. identify each front by the weather it produces.
warm
stationary
cold
occluded
a cold air mass advances on a warm air mass, causing rain.
a warm air mass advances on a cold air mass, causing rain.
air masses that are close in temperature collide, typically leading to mild weather.
three air masses meet, usually leading to strong winds and heavy rain
To solve this, we match each front description to its type:
- A cold air mass advances on a warm air mass, causing rain. → This is a cold front (cold air pushes warm air up, causing precipitation).
- A warm air mass advances on a cold air mass, causing rain. → This is a warm front (warm air rises over cold air, leading to rain).
- Air masses that are close in temperature collide, typically leading to mild weather. → This is a stationary front (neither air mass advances, so weather is mild/steady).
- Three air masses meet, usually leading to strong winds and heavy rain. → This is an occluded front (formed when a cold front overtakes a warm front, involving three air masses).
Final Pairings:
- A cold air mass advances on a warm air mass, causing rain. → cold
- A warm air mass advances on a cold air mass, causing rain. → warm
- Air masses that are close in temperature collide, typically leading to mild weather. → stationary
- Three air masses meet, usually leading to strong winds and heavy rain. → occluded
Snap & solve any problem in the app
Get step-by-step solutions on Sovi AI
Photo-based solutions with guided steps
Explore more problems and detailed explanations
To solve this, we match each front description to its type:
- A cold air mass advances on a warm air mass, causing rain. → This is a cold front (cold air pushes warm air up, causing precipitation).
- A warm air mass advances on a cold air mass, causing rain. → This is a warm front (warm air rises over cold air, leading to rain).
- Air masses that are close in temperature collide, typically leading to mild weather. → This is a stationary front (neither air mass advances, so weather is mild/steady).
- Three air masses meet, usually leading to strong winds and heavy rain. → This is an occluded front (formed when a cold front overtakes a warm front, involving three air masses).
Final Pairings:
- A cold air mass advances on a warm air mass, causing rain. → cold
- A warm air mass advances on a cold air mass, causing rain. → warm
- Air masses that are close in temperature collide, typically leading to mild weather. → stationary
- Three air masses meet, usually leading to strong winds and heavy rain. → occluded