Principle
Fronts are zones of transition between two different air masses.
The zone may be 20 miles across or it may be 100 miles across,
but from one side of a front to the other, one clearly would
sense that the properties of an air mass had changed significantly
(e.g., contrasts in temperature and dew point, wind direction,
cloud cover, and on-going weather). The frontal zone represents
the leading edge of a wedge of cold/cool air. If the wedge
is moving into an area of warmer air, the front is called a
cold front. If the wedge is retreating and warmer air is moving
into an area previously occupied by cool air, the front is
termed a warm front. |
Figure 1 -
Types of Fronts
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Definition
- Fronts are boundaries between air masses of different
temperatures.
Fronts are actually zones of
transition, but sometimes the transition zone, called
a frontal zone, can be quite sharp.
- The type of front depends on both the direction in which
the air mass is moving and the characteristics of the air
mass.
There are four types of fronts
that will be described below: cold front, warm front,
stationary front, and occluded front.
- To locate a front on a surface map, look for the following:
- sharp temperature changes over relatively short
distances,
- changes in the moisture content of the air (dew
point),
- shifts in wind direction,
- low pressure troughs and pressure changes, and
- clouds and precipitation patterns.
Not all of these patterns may
be obvious or even occur, but these are some signs.
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Figure
2 - Side View of a Typical Cold Front

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Cold
Fronts
- Cold front- a front in which cold air is replacing
warm air at the surface.
- Some of the characteristics of cold fronts include
the following:
- The slope of a typical cold front is 1:100
(vertical to horizontal).
- Cold fronts tend to move faster than all other
types of fronts.
- Cold fronts tend to be associated with the
most violent weather among all types of fronts.
- Cold fronts tend to move the farthest while
maintaining their intensity.
- Cold fronts tend to be associated with cirrus
well ahead of the front, strong thunderstorms
along and ahead of the front, and a broad area
of clouds immediately behind the front (although
fast moving fronts may be mostly clear behind
the front).
- Cold fronts can be associated with squall lines
(a line of strong thunderstorms parallel to and
ahead of the front).
- In winter, cold fronts move into Oklahoma mainly
from the Canadian prairies but sometimes from the Arctic
Circle or the eastern Pacific.
- Cold fronts almost always are easier to locate on
a weather map than are warm fronts, primarily because
of the strength of the high pressure system to the
north and west of the cold front compared to that north
of a warm front.
- Cold fronts usually bring cooler weather, clearing
skies, and a sharp change in wind direction.
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Figure
3 - Side View of a Typical Warm Front
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Warm
Fronts
- Warm front- a front in which warm air replaces cooler
air at the surface.
- Some of the characteristics of warm fronts include
the following:
- The slope of a typical warm front is 1:200
(more gentle than cold fronts).
- Warm fronts tend to move slowly.
- Warm fronts are typically less violent than
cold fronts.
- Although they can trigger thunderstorms, warm
fronts are more likely to be associated with
large regions of gentle ascent (stratiform clouds
and light to moderate continuous rain).
- Warm fronts are usually preceded by cirrus
first (1000 km ahead), then altostratus or altocumulus
(500 km ahead), then stratus and possibly fog.
- Behind the warm front, skies are relatively
clear (but change gradually).
- Warm fronts are associated with a frontal inversion
(warm air overrunning cooler air).
- If a warm front exists on a weather map, it will
be northeast of the cold front and often, to the east
of a surface low pressure area.
- Clouds and precipitation are quite prevalent to the
north of the warm front.
This
results from the fact that low-level southerly winds
in the "warm
sector" of the cyclone rise up and over
the cooler, more dense air at the surface located
north of the warm front. The lifting leads to
saturation, cloud formation, and, ultimately,
to some form of precipitation.
- In Oklahoma, warm fronts are rare in the winter and
non-existent in the summer.
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Stationary
Fronts
- Stationary front- a front that does not move or barely
moves.
- Stationary fronts behave like warm fronts, but are more
quiescent.
- Many times the winds on both sides of a stationary front
are parallel to the front.
- Typically stationary fronts form when polar air masses
are modified significantly so as to lose their character
(e.g., cold fronts which stall).
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Figure
4 - Development of an Occluded Front
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Occluded
Fronts
- Because cold fronts move faster than warm fronts, they
can catch up to and overtake their related warm front.
When they do, an occluded front is formed.
- Occluded fronts are indicative of mature storm systems
(i.e., those about to dissipate).
- The most common type of occlusion in North America is
called a cold-front occlusion and it occurs when the cold
front forces itself under the warm front.
The weather ahead of the cold
occlusion is similar to that of a warm front while
that along and behind the cold occlusion is similar
to that of a cold front.
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