Definition
Areas of the atmosphere where surface air pressure is lower than that of the surrounding air. Air flows inward toward the center of a low and rises, which cools the air, often producing clouds, precipitation, and unsettled weather. In the Northern Hemisphere, winds circulate around a low in a counterclockwise direction.
Plain English
A region where the air weighs less than the air around it. Because air moves from high pressure toward low pressure, air flows in toward the center and is forced upward, which usually leads to clouds and bad weather.
Context Anchor
Seen in weather briefings, surface weather charts, and discussions of wind patterns and changing weather before a flight.
Derivation
From Latin pressura, meaning 'a pressing.' A 'low-pressure' area is simply one where the atmosphere is pressing down with less force than in surrounding regions, which is why air from those higher-pressure areas flows in toward it.
Why Pilots Care
Low-pressure systems are the primary source of widespread clouds, precipitation, turbulence, and reduced visibility that affect route selection and safety decisions.
Grounding Statement
Picture air being pulled inward toward a center and squeezed upward like toothpaste from a tube — as it rises and cools, moisture condenses and weather forms.
Intuition Check
“Low pressure” does not mean the air has disappeared or that flight is automatically unsafe. It means the air pressure is lower than nearby areas, which often leads to rising air and more active weather.
Example Sentence 1
The briefer pointed out a low-pressure system moving across the route and recommended delaying the flight until the front passed.
Example Sentence 2
By flying south of the low-pressure system the crew avoided the worst turbulence and maintained visual conditions for most of the trip.