Water Cycle
Winds
Air Masses
Fronts
Weather Maps
100

What is the process called when water vapor cools and turns back into liquid?

Condensation


100

What causes wind to blow?




Uneven heating of Earth's surface



100

What are air masses?



Large volumes of air that have the same temperature and humidity throughout



100

What is a front?



The boundary where two different air masses meet



100

What does a red "L" on a weather map represent




Low Pressure - cloudy skies



200

What type of precipitation occurs when water droplets in clouds freeze into ice crystals?


Snow


200

What is a land breeze and when does it occur?


A breeze that blows from land to water at night as the land cools faster than the water


200

What two characteristics are used to describe air masses?


Moisture (dry or wet) and temperature (warm or cold)


200

What type of front forms when warm air moves over cold air, bringing steady rain or snow?


Warm Front


200

What type of weather would be seen around an area that has a Big Blue H on it? Explain why


Clear skies and sunny, because the H means High pressure - high pressure means cool air is sinking - no moisture rising to create clouds


300

What is the process called where water from the surface of the Earth evaporates, cools, and falls back to Earth as precipitation?

Water cycle




300

Describe or draw a sea breeze




A breeze that blows from water to land during the day as the land heats up faster than the water


300

What type of air mass brings dry, warm air?



Continental Tropical


300

What type of weather is associated with cold fronts?



Heavy storms followed by cooler, clear skies



300

What air masses are creating the front circled in the picture #1?


cP (continental polar from Canada) and cT (continental tropical from Mexico)


400

What do we call the movement of water through plants and its release into the atmosphere as water vapor?


Transpiration


400

What is the Coriolis Effect?




The Coriolis Effect causes winds to be deflected due to Earth’s rotation



400

Which air mass would develop over the Northern Pacific Ocean?



Maritime Polar

400

What is a stationary front?



A front where two air masses meet and stop moving, possibly bringing days of rain


400

What is the name of the front that circled in Picture #2 - what is special about this front?

Occluded Front - formed with THREE air masses


500

How does the sun power our weather?



The sun heats water on Earth’s surface, causing evaporation, then condensation, which is the creation of clouds


500

Name the three global wind patterns and where they occur.


Trade winds (near equator from east to west), Polar Easterlies (near poles from east to west), and Prevailing Westerlies (middle of hemisphere from west to east)


500

What moves air masses from one place to another?


Winds and jet streams


500

Draw or describe the symbol that is associated with an occluded front


Purple line with triangles and semicircles on the same side - pointing in the direction it is traveling


500

What will the weather be like when the front circled in Picture #3 has passed by?

Warm and humid - warm front is the warm air mass moving into the area - temperature drops after has passed