WSR-88D on April 3, 2011. The thin blue line labeled "cold front" is the front, with severe thunderstorms seen developing behind the front, which is moving towards the bottom right. A cold front commonly brings a narrow band of
precipitation that follows along the leading edge of the cold front. These bands of precipitation are often very strong, and can bring severe thunderstorms,
hailstorms, snow squalls, These rainstorms sometimes bring
flooding, and can move very slowly when the storm steering it is strong and embedded within a
meridional flow pattern (with more pole to equator motion rather than west to east motion). In the winter, cold fronts can bring cold spells, and occasionally snow. In the spring or summer in temperate latitudes, hail may occasionally fall along with the rain. If moisture is not sufficient, such as when a system has previously moved across a mountain barrier, cold fronts can pass without cloudiness.
Frontogenetical circulation Frontogenesis is the process of creating or steepening the temperature gradient of a front. During this process the atmosphere reacts in an attempt to restore balance, the consequence is a circular motion along the front where air is being lifted up, along the cold front and dropping downward, behind the frontal boundary. This is the actual force of upward motion along a front that is responsible for clouds and precipitation. As the temperature gradient steepens during frontogenesis, the
thermal wind becomes imbalanced. To maintain balance, the
geostrophic wind aloft and below adjust, such that regions of divergence/convergence form.
Mass continuity would require a vertical transport of air along the cold front where there is divergence (lowered
pressure). Although this circulation is described by a series of processes, they are actually occurring at the same time, observable along the front as a thermally direct circulation. There are several factors that influence the final shape and tilt of the circulation around the front, ultimately determining the kind and location of clouds and precipitation. ==Temperature changes==