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I think the convention is to color them according to the temperature of the front they are pushing - warmer air than is marked red, cooler marked blue. Unusual to have a warm low pressure area and a cool high pressure area, but I can see it happening.
No, it's just a wide area of low pressure, and the area of high pressure is very small. The front is labeled by what's pushing it, not by what's touching it.
I think the convention is to color them according to the temperature of the front they are pushing - warmer air than is marked red, cooler marked blue. Unusual to have a warm low pressure area and a cool high pressure area, but I can see it happening.
No, it's just a wide area of low pressure, and the area of high pressure is very small. The front is labeled by what's pushing it, not by what's touching it.
What do you think ?
Whait, is the low air pressure red and the high air pressure blue in the USA?
I think the convention is to color them according to the temperature of the front they are pushing - warmer air than is marked red, cooler marked blue. Unusual to have a warm low pressure area and a cool high pressure area, but I can see it happening.
Why? Do weather charts in other countries' have the low as blue and high as red?
No, it's just a wide area of low pressure, and the area of high pressure is very small. The front is labeled by what's pushing it, not by what's touching it.
I think in Spain it's the same way
Do you mean a high-pressure front cannot be a cold one? Blue is for cold, hot is normally for heat.
This should be #1 lol
Haha! I would love to see our local weathers man/woman do that!
Whait, is the low air pressure red and the high air pressure blue in the USA?
I think the convention is to color them according to the temperature of the front they are pushing - warmer air than is marked red, cooler marked blue. Unusual to have a warm low pressure area and a cool high pressure area, but I can see it happening.
Why? Do weather charts in other countries' have the low as blue and high as red?
No, it's just a wide area of low pressure, and the area of high pressure is very small. The front is labeled by what's pushing it, not by what's touching it.
I think in Spain it's the same way
Do you mean a high-pressure front cannot be a cold one? Blue is for cold, hot is normally for heat.
This should be #1 lol
Haha! I would love to see our local weathers man/woman do that!