Clouds
Air Masses and Fronts
Precipitation
Wind
Instruments
100

This fluffy, white cloud looks like cotton and usually means fair weather.

Cumulus Cloud

100

This type of air mass is cold and dry, often bringing clear skies to the northern U.S. in winter, and forms over interior Canada or Siberia

Continental Polar

100

This type of precipitation occurs when rain falls through a layer of freezing air near the ground, forming small, clear ice pellets.

Sleet

100

Wind is caused by differences in this atmospheric factor between locations

Air Pressure

100

This instrument measures air temperature.

Thermometer


200

These thin, wispy clouds form high in the sky and are made of ice crystals

Cirrus Clouds

200

When a maritime polar (mP) air mass meets a continental tropical (cT) air mass, what kind of weather is most likely to occur along the boundary?

Showers, thunderstorms, or cloudy weather
200

Explain why orographic lifting often causes one side of a mountain to be very wet and the other side dry.

Moist air rises up the windward side, cools, condenses, and produces precipitation. The leeward side gets dry air descending, creating a rain shadow.

200

Winds that blow steadily from west to east in the mid-latitudes are called this.

Westerlies

200

This device measures air pressure and is important for predicting storms.

Barometer

300

These clouds form in low layers, often covering the whole sky like a gray blanket, and can bring drizzle or light rain.

Stratus Clouds

300

This front moves faster than warm fronts and often causes a sudden drop in temperature, gusty winds, and heavy but short-lived rain or thunderstorms.

Cold Front

300

This precipitation type forms when supercooled water droplets freeze on contact with surfaces, often coating trees and roads with ice.

Freezing Rain

300

A local wind that blows from land to sea at night is called this, and it forms due to temperature differences.

Land breeze

300

This instrument shows wind direction using a rotating pointer, often on rooftops.

Wind vane or weather vane

400

This tall, towering cloud is associated with thunderstorms and severe weather.

Cumulonimbus Clouds

400

Explain why a stationary front can produce days of cloudy, wet weather, and how it differs from a occluded front in its formation.

A stationary front doesn’t move, so warm air rises slowly over cold air along the boundary, causing prolonged clouds and precipitation. An occluded front occurs when a cold front overtakes a warm front, lifting warm air off the ground.

400

What type of precipitation forms when tiny water droplets in clouds combine and fall, usually in warm weather?

Rain
400

Explain why mountain valleys often experience strong winds during the day and calm winds at night.

During the day, the sun warms the valley floor, causing air to rise and draw cooler air from the mountains (upslope winds). At night, the air cools and sinks, causing downslope winds or calm conditions.

400

Explain how a rain gauge works and why multiple measurements are sometimes taken in different locations.

A rain gauge collects falling precipitation in a cylinder, measuring the depth of rain. Multiple gauges are used because rainfall can vary across an area.

500

These clouds are thin, sheet-like, and appear at high altitudes. They can indicate changing weather patterns and often cover large parts of the sky.

Cirrostratus Clouds

500

A maritime tropical (mT) air mass from the Gulf of Mexico collides with a continental polar (cP) air mass from Canada in spring. Describe the likely type of front, cloud formations, and weather.

Cold front formation, cumulonimbus clouds, thunderstorms, heavy rain, possibly severe weather due to rapid lifting of warm, moist air by cold, dense air.

500

Describe how temperature affects whether precipitation falls as rain, snow, or sleet.


If the air from the cloud to the ground stays below freezing, it falls as snow. If it melts then refreezes before hitting the ground, it becomes sleet. If it melts completely and stays above freezing near the surface, it falls as rain.

500

This scale measures wind speed and the damage it can cause, and is commonly used for hurricanes and tornadoes.

Beaufort Scale

500

This instrument measures wind speed, and it often has cups or propellers that spin faster with stronger winds.

Anemometer

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