Air masses are like giant blankets that cover parts of the Earth, and they bring different weather because of where they come from.
Imagine you have two big thermos cups, one filled with hot chocolate and the other with cold lemonade. The hot chocolate is like a warm air mass, and the cold lemonade is like a cold air mass. When these thermos cups move around, they bring their temperature with them.
What Makes an Air Mass?
Air masses get their traits from where they form:
- If they start in a hot place, like near the equator, they become warm.
- If they start in a cold place, like near the North Pole, they become cold.
They also pick up moisture if they travel over oceans. So a warm air mass that travels over an ocean might bring rain, just like how wet sand gets when you splash water on it.
When these giant thermos cups move and meet each other, they create weather, like when hot chocolate spills into cold lemonade and makes a messy mix!
Examples
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See also
- What is That’s how a hurricane starts?
- How distance from the ocean affects climate?
- How a repurposed medical device is helping us investigate ancient climate tipping?
- How climate change makes hurricanes worse?
- How does climate change fuel drought?