Want this question answered?
As you have written it, the quantity "96 percent relative humidity" has only a magnitude. If you can find a reasonable and meaningful way to relate it to a direction, then it'll also have a direction. I notice, however, that over several decades of broadcast and printed weather conditions and forecasts, I have never once seen a direction stated as part of the relative humidity, and that never seemed to leave it lacking in information. So I'm guessing that you probably won't be able to do it.
16 mph
it brings in fair weather
Weather people use probability to predict weather in the future based on passed recent weather and by clouds and winds
Empirical probabilities.
An occluded front is represented by a pattern of blue triangles and red circles.
An occluded front is represented by a pattern of blue triangles and red circles.
A warm front on a weather map is always a red line with red half circles on it.
Circles=Warm fronts Triangles=Cold fronts Fronts=where two air masses meet air mass=large region of air that has similar temperatures and humidity throughout
On a weather map, the symbol for a cold front is a blue line with blue triangles facing the direction that the front is moving.
The symbol for a Cold front on a weather map is represented with a blue line with blue triangles facing the direction that the front is traveling. A warm front is represented with a red line with red half-circles facing the direction of travel.
The type of front associated with purple triangles and semicircles on a weather map is a occluded front.
They stand for an approaching storm front. If I remember correctly, a red line means a warm front and a blue line means a cold front. The triangles show which direction the front is moving. Hope that helps.
On weather maps, cold fronts are marked with a symbol consisting of triangle-shaped pips pointing in the direction the cold front is traveling. It is placed on the leading edge of the front.
A stationary front is stalled between two air masses. The markings used on a weather map are alternating red half circles and blue spikes pointing in opposite directions. This indicates no movement.
The direction of the wind is measured using a wind vane. The wind direction is a good indicator of how the weather will change and what weather can be expected with that wind direction.
H means high pressure, or cold and dry with little chance of stormy weather. L means low pressure, or warm and moist with a probability of storms. A line with triangles means it will bring cold, stormy weather. A line with half circles, gentle steady rain or snow that lasts for a long period of time. Those are the most simple weather symbols.