The cold air pushes the hot air up.
When going up the temp. drops and the air can't hold as much water when it is warm.
So clouds devlope.
When there is more force pushing on the cold air mass you first get light whispy clouds than usally a mild rain.
If it is the other way and more force is behind the cold air mass that push the warm up directly up and you get more violent storms.
2007-01-25 13:37:49
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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the cold air is heavier than hot air. so the hot air will rise above the cold air - cool down and tend to release its moisture - causing clouds and rain. The warm air that has cooled down will eventually sink.
If the cold air is the one that is moving into the warm air, you would have a cold front with the typcial weather that brings. Rain, wind, clouds, followed by clearer but cold weather.
When warm air replaces cold air - you get a warm front - the warm air still rises above the cold air producing rain and clouds, but as the front passes you get warmer weather.
2007-01-25 13:40:27
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answer #2
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answered by elentophanes 4
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cold air is much heavier than warm air , so the cold air from the top of the flat will flow out of the door allowing warmer air to flow in , the warm air will stay at the top of the room with the colder air still at the bottom.you will have a draft.
2016-04-11 03:03:07
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Severe Weather
2007-01-25 15:32:02
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answer #4
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answered by Justin 6
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Condensation, but only if the hot air is moist enough.
2007-01-25 13:40:54
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Warm air...lol
2007-01-25 13:35:53
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answer #6
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answered by Juggernaut 2
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Thunderstorms.
2007-01-25 13:32:28
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answer #7
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answered by bakfanlin 6
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Forms very violent very fast moving thunderstoms which usually spawn tornados
2007-01-25 16:03:35
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answer #8
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answered by sportsfreak711 2
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Thunder stormes, tornadoes, hurricanes.
2007-01-25 13:41:50
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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wind and precipitation.
2007-01-25 13:37:07
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answer #10
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answered by Kim 3
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