Mid-Latitude Cyclones
No. Hurricanes are a tropical weather system. They form in the absence of fronts.
The main features of this system include; fine weather warm fronts possible light rain higher humidity
Multicellular eukaryotes
Tornadoes are usually spawned by a kind of thunderstorm called a supercell, which is typically associated with the fronts connected to a mid-latitude low pressure system.
Not always. Although many cumulnimbus clouds are associated with cold fronts, some form along dry lines or, lest often, warm fronts. Some form without any sort of front or organized weather system.
Weather System: The Weather System is made out of jet streams, fronts, temperatures, precipitation, and air.
A high pressure system brings with it light winds and generally fair weather. A low pressure system brings wet, humid weather and is the cause of many weather fronts.
No. Hurricanes are a tropical weather system. They form in the absence of fronts.
There is no fixed speed, it depends on the energy in the weather system of which the cold front is a part. However cold fronts move faster than warm fronts, this leads to occluded fronts.
The main features of this system include; fine weather warm fronts possible light rain higher humidity
ECONOMY! ;)
Multicellular eukaryotes
The system of producing goods and services is called an economy. This system uses humans to produce and sell the goods. When the people have no say in what will be produced or how, this is called a command economy.
Economy or "economic system"
Cold weather front have low pressure air and rain/snow/hail/tornadoes and even hurricanes depending on location. Cold fronts bring huge, towering, billowing clouds [Cumulonimbus] that bring thunderstorms. Warm weather fronts bring gentle precipitation and high pressure air. Warm weather fronts also bring sheetlike clouds [Stratus] and wispy clouds [Cirrus] On the other hand, when there is no front, puffy white clouds [Cumulus] come on fair sunny days.
Tornadoes are usually spawned by a kind of thunderstorm called a supercell, which is typically associated with the fronts connected to a mid-latitude low pressure system.
Not always. Although many cumulnimbus clouds are associated with cold fronts, some form along dry lines or, lest often, warm fronts. Some form without any sort of front or organized weather system.