Met Question and Answer
Met Question and Answer
Met Question and Answer
11- what should you expect when you are about to get past a microburst?
22- Please select one condition necessary for the formation of cumulonimbus clouds
Unstable moist air
23- the amount of water vapor the air can hold depends on what?
26- the wind system associated with a low pressure in the northern hemisphere is
called?
Called cyclone, Low pressure
28- the presence of ice pellets on the surface is evidence that there is…?
30- what prevents air flowing directly from high pressure to low pressure?
The Coriolis effect
4. Why does the wind have a tendency to flow parallel to the isobars above the friction level?
C. Coriolis force tends to counterbalance the horizontal pressure gradient.
5.With regard to windflow patterns shown on surface analysis charts, when the isobars are
A. close together, the pressure gradient force is greater and wind velocities are stronger.
7.Which is true regarding a cold front occlusion? The air ahead of the warm front
A. is warmer than the air behind the overtaking cold front.
10. When flying into a low-pressure area in the Northern Hemisphere, the wind direction and
velocity will be from the
B. left and increasing.
11. While flying cross-country, in the Northern Hemisphere, you experience a continuous left
crosswind which is associated with a major wind system. This indicates that you
C. are flying toward an area of generally unfavorable weather conditions
12. What prevents air from flowing directly from high-pressure areas to low-pressure areas?
A. Coriolis force.
13. The general circulation of air associated with a high-pressure area in the Northern
Hemisphere is
A. outward, downward, and clockwise.
14. The wind system associated with a low-pressure area in the Northern Hemisphere is
C. a cyclone and is caused by Coriolis force.
15. During the winter months in the middle latitudes, the jet stream shifts toward the
B. south and speed increases
18. The jet stream and associated clear air turbulence can sometimes be visually identified in
flight by
A. long streaks of cirrus clouds.
20. Which type of jetstream can be expected to cause the greater turbulence?
C. A curving jetstream associated with a deep low-pressure trough.
25. Which is true regarding actual air temperature and dew point temperature spread? The
temperature spread
C. decreases as the relative humidity increases.
29. What is the approximate base of the cumulus clouds if the temperature at 2,000 feet MSL is
10°C and the dew point is 1°C?
A. 6,000 feet MSL.
30. What determines the structure or type of clouds which will form as a result of air being
forced to ascend?
A. The stability of the air before lifting occurs.
34. Which in-flight hazard is most commonly associated with warm fronts?
A. Precipitation-induced fog.
36. Advection fog has drifted over a coastal airport during the day. What may tend to dissipate
or lift this fog into low stratus clouds?
C. Wind 15 knots or stronger.
37. In what ways do advection fog, radiation fog, and steam fog differ in their formation or
location?
B. Radiation fog is restricted to land areas; advection fog is most common along coastal areas;
steam fog forms over a water surface.
39. Which conditions are favorable for the formation of a surface based temperature inversion?
A. Clear, cool nights with calm or light wind.
40. With respect to advection fog, which statement is true?
B. It can appear suddenly during day or night, and it is more persistent than radiation fog.
47. What type weather can one expect from moist, unstable air, and very warm surface
temperature?
C. Strong updrafts and cumulonimbus clouds.
49. If clouds form as a result of very stable, moist air being forced to ascend a mountain slope,
the clouds will be
C. stratus type with little vertical development and little or no turbulence.
51. When an air mass is stable, which of these conditions are most likely to exist?
C. Smoke, dust, haze, etc., concentrated at the lower levels with resulting poor visibility.
54. Convective circulation patterns associated with sea breezes are caused by
C. land absorbing and radiating heat faster than the water.
56. The difference found by subtracting the temperature of a parcel of air theoretically lifted
from the surface to 500 millibars and the existing temperature at 500 millibars is
called the
B. lifted index.
57. The conditions necessary for the formation of stratiform clouds are a lifting action and
C. stable, moist air.
59. What feature is normally associated with the cumulus stage of a thunderstorm?
B. Continuous updraft.
60. The conditions necessary for the formation of cumulonimbus clouds are a lifting action and
B. unstable, moist air.
61. The most severe weather conditions, such as destructive winds, heavy hail, and tornadoes,
are generally associated with
A. squall lines.
62. Of the following, which is accurate regarding turbulence associated with thunderstorms?
B. Outside the cloud, shear turbulence can be encountered 20 miles laterally from a severe
storm.
66. Which is true regarding the use of airborne weather-avoidance radar for the recognition of
certain weather conditions?
C. The radarscope provides no assurance of avoiding instrument weather conditions.
67. Which weather phenomenon signals the beginning of the mature stage of a thunderstorm?
B. The start of rain.
68. During the life cycle of a thunderstorm, which stage is characterized predominately by
downdrafts?
C. Dissipating.
70. If airborne radar is indicating an extremely intense thunderstorm echo, this thunderstorm
should be avoided by a distance of at least
C. 20 miles.
71. Which situation would most likely result in freezing precipitation? Rain falling from air which
has a temperature of
A. more than 32°F into air having a temperature of 32°F or less.
74. Ice pellets encountered during flight normally are evidence that
A. a warm front is about to pass.
75. Ice pellets encountered during flight are normally evidence that
A. freezing rain exists at higher altitude.
77. A pilot reporting turbulence that momentarily causes slight, erratic changes in altitude
and/or attitude should report it as
B. light turbulence.
78. When turbulence causes changes in altitude and/or attitude, but aircraft control remains
positive, that should be reported as
C. moderate.
79. Turbulence that is encountered above 15,000 feet AGL not associated with cumuliform
cloudiness, including thunderstorms, should be reported as
C. clear air turbulence
80. The minimum vertical wind shear value critical for probable moderate or greater turbulence
is
C. 6 knots per 1,000 feet.
81. One of the most dangerous features of mountain waves is the turbulent areas in and
B. below rotor clouds.
82. The conditions most favorable to wave formation over mountainous areas are a laver of
C. stable air at mountaintop altitude and a wind of at least 20 knots blowing across the ridge.
83. When flying low over hilly terrain, ridges, or mountain ranges, the greatest potential danger
from turbulent air currents will usually be encountered on the
C. leeward side when flying into the wind.
84. Convective currents are most active on warm summer afternoons when winds are
B. light.
85. During departure, under conditions of suspected low-level wind shear, a sudden decrease in
headwind will cause
C. a loss in airspeed equal to the decrease in wind velocity.
86. During an approach, the most important and most easily recognized means of being alerted
to possible wind shear is monitoring the
B. power and vertical velocity required to remain on the proper glidepath.
92. The Low Level Wind Shear Alert System (LLWAS) provides wind data and software process
to detect the presence of a
C. change in wind direction and/or speed within a very short distance above the airport.