A
warm front is a slow-moving air mass that displaces a cold air mass. Warm fronts typically move at speeds of 10 to 25 miles per hour, and clouds form as warm air is lifted up, then cooled and condensed to form clouds. A warm front may bring persistent precipitation, fog, and cloudy skies, signaling the start of wet weather. Sleet can also form when a warm front meets an extremely cold air mass, cooling the air below. On the other hand,
cold fronts move faster than warm fronts, at speeds of 25 to 30 miles per hour (up to 60 miles per hour). Cold fronts can cause rapid changes in weather. When a cold front moves into an area, it brings with it a drop in temperatures, which can lead to thunderstorms. These can cause big changes in the weather. Although the stationary front's position may not move, there is air motion as warm air rises up and over the cold air, responsive to the
geostrophic induced by
frontogenesis. A wide variety of weather may occur along a stationary front. If one or both air masses are humid enough,
cloudy skies and prolonged
precipitation are recurring, with
storm trains or mesocyclone systems. When the warmer air mass is very moist, heavy or extreme rain or snow can occur. Stationary fronts may dissipate after several days or devolve into
shear lines. A stationary front becomes a
shear line when air density contrast across the front vanishes, usually because of temperature equalization, while the narrow wind shift zone persists for some time. That is most common over open oceans, where the ocean surface temperature is similar on both sides of the front and modifies both air masses to correspond to its temperature. That sometimes also provides enough heat energy and moisture to form subtropical storms and tropical cyclones at the surface. == References ==