Geography-ncert-notes / Geography NCERT Notes / Air Masses, fronts and cyclone

Air Masses, fronts and cyclone

Air Masses

  • An air mass is a sizable body of air characterized by relatively uniform temperature and humidity properties. It attains these characteristics by remaining stationary over a specific area for an extended period, allowing it to reach equilibrium with the underlying surface. A front marks the boundary where two distinct air masses meet on Earth's surface, each possessing unique temperature and humidity features.
  • On the other hand, a cyclone is a weather phenomenon or system of winds that revolves around a center of low atmospheric pressure, moving at a speed of 30-50 km/h.
  • Air masses play a role in modifying the temperature and moisture content along their path, undergoing modifications themselves. An air mass forms when it lingers over a homogenous area for a significant duration, adopting the characteristics of that region.

An air mass exhibits two fundamental traits:

  • Vertical temperature distribution, known as lapse rate, a measure indicating its warmth or coldness, influencing its stability.
  • Homogeneous moisture content, serving as an indicator of latent heat.

Classification of Air Masses

Air masses can be categorized as follows:

Arctic and Antarctica Air Masses

  • These air masses originate over expansive snow and ice-covered regions, typically near the poles in both hemispheres.
  • Forming predominantly during winter (December to March in the Northern hemisphere and June to September in the Southern hemisphere), when the poles experience minimal insolation and remain tranquil without significant heating.

Polar Air Masses

  • Source regions for polar air masses are generally located between 55° and 65° latitudes in both hemispheres. Various regions contribute to the formation of polar air masses in the Northern hemisphere, including Siberia in winter, the Gulf of Alaska, Northern Canada, the North Pacific to the South of the Atlantic, and West of the British Isles.

Tropical Air Masses

  • There is a network of tropical air mass source regions encircling the Northern hemisphere and another in the Southern hemisphere near the Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn.
  • These sources are associated with the subtropical high-pressure belt and large-scale subsidence, leading to adiabatic warming. These high-pressure belts are responsible for the world's deserts, and tropical air masses form over regions such as the Sahara, Azores, Southwest USA (summer), and Northern Mexico (summer).

Equatorial Air Masses

  • The convergence of trade winds at the Equator forms the 'Inter-Tropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ),' a trough of low pressure. Stagnant air regions in some areas serve as sources for equatorial air mass formation, occurring only over water in these latitudes.

Fronts

  • The sloping boundary that separates two opposing air masses with differing characteristics in terms of temperature, density, pressure, humidity, and wind direction is known as a front. 
  • Fronts are most pronounced in middle latitudes where polar cold air masses and tropical warm air masses converge, characterized by steep temperature and pressure gradients. 
  • Frontogenesis refers to the process of front formation or intensification, while frontolysis is the weakening or destruction of fronts, leading to the birth of cyclones and anticyclones.

Classification of Fronts

Fronts can be categorized as follows:

Stationary Front

  • When a front remains stationary, it is called a stationary front. This type of front exhibits no noticeable weather disturbances, as two different air masses stand face to face without significant movement. Later, it may transform into another type of front.

Warm Front

  • A well-defined boundary between a warm and cold air mass, where the warm air advances and overrides the cold air, marking the leading edge of the warm sector of a depression. 
  • The gradient of the warm front is gentler than that of the cold front, resulting in the slow ascent of warm moist air, cooling, condensation, and the development of nimbus clouds.

Cold Front

  • A clearly defined boundary between a warm and cold air mass, where the cold air advances and undercuts the warm air (rear of the warm sector of a frontal depression). 
  • This results in a significant temperature drop, extensive cumulonimbus cloud development, heavy rainfall (sometimes with thunder), and the wind blowing from a Northern to Northwestern direction in the Northern hemisphere.
  • The gradually rising warm air along the gently sloping warm front is cooled adiabatically, leading to saturation, condensation, and precipitation over a relatively large area for several hours in the form of moderate to gentle precipitation.

Occluded Front

  • A front that develops during the later stages of the warm sector is no longer at the ground surface. Here, warm air mass is uplifted completely by the cold air mass in the rear of the depression.
  • As the cold front normally travels more quickly than the warm front, it slowly reduces the area of the warm sector, until it merges with the preceding front to complete the occlusion process. The occlusion is therefore, a compound zone with warm and cold front characteristics.
  • The associated weather has characteristics of both warm front and cold front weather

Diagrammatic Representation of Vertical Sections of (A) Warm Front(B) Cold Front (C) Occluded Front

Frontal Zones

There are three types of frontal zones which are as follows.

Arctic Frontal Zone

  • Arctic marine and continental winds collide to form Arctic Frontal Zones. Due to the nearly same temperature of the convergent winds, they are not very active.
  • The extension of the Arctic Frontal Zone is found in Eurasia and North America.

Polar Frontal Zone

  • When the cold polar air mass and the warm tropical air mass collide, a polar front is created.