Eric
See you in the Wasatch!
- Joined
- Jan 6, 2002
- Posts
- 205
Ok, so I'm explaining weather for the first time to a student.....
I explain high and low pressure, air moves from high to low, high sinks, low rises, coriolis, etc.
I also explained convection and adiabatic cooling, stability, lapse rates....
He then made the assumption that high pressure areas are always colder than low pressure areas....that is why the low pressure areas rise he thinks.
I told him I didn't think he could make that blanket statement and that he was confusing two different topics.
What's the story? Are low pressure areas warmer than high pressure areas? If so, why would a warm front even move and rise above cold air?
Also, why can warm air hold more water vapor than cold air?
Thanks
Eric
I explain high and low pressure, air moves from high to low, high sinks, low rises, coriolis, etc.
I also explained convection and adiabatic cooling, stability, lapse rates....
He then made the assumption that high pressure areas are always colder than low pressure areas....that is why the low pressure areas rise he thinks.
I told him I didn't think he could make that blanket statement and that he was confusing two different topics.
What's the story? Are low pressure areas warmer than high pressure areas? If so, why would a warm front even move and rise above cold air?
Also, why can warm air hold more water vapor than cold air?
Thanks
Eric