Much of northern North America is currently a bit chilly. I’ve heard it said that there is a polar air mass or Canadian air mass or an air mass from some place farther north than where the weather reporter happens to be at the time, that is responsible for the cold.
So, is there warmer (warmer for “up there” ) air displacing the cold air streaming down at us?
Of course. Air heats in the tropics and rises, moves toward the poles, gets cold there and sinks, and moves toward the tropics. There are more complications, but this is one of the big patterns.
Air is not a liquid though it is a fluid. It is compressible through temperature and gravity. The flow of air is due to relative pressures seeking equilibrium. This causes both vertical and horizontal flows.
Thus , for the time being all thats mostly going on with the air up north is a dropping of pressure.
Generally, the jet stream travels from the Pacific to the Atlantic close to the Canadian border. It is sometimes split, or deflected south by a high pressure area in Canada. This brings cold air from Canada to the U.S… It usually heads back north after passing the high pressure area.
So I think it is not so much cold air being displaced south, as it is easterly winds temporarily dipping south of the border.
I’m not a met guy but I’ve had to study bits of it on occasion, unfortunately I’ve data dumped as much as I can.
Napier has the basics of it. There is a wiki article here describing the main circulation patterns. The one of interest in terms of polar air masses moving south to bring cold weather to the warmer latitudes would probably be the “polar cell”.
It should be noted that these patterns are nowhere near as neat and tidy as pictured. The variation in seasons causes substantial changes as well as the presence of landmasses or oceanic areas etc.
dtilque, your own thread contains an incorrect assumption. You picture warmer air replacing the cold air that has left the arctic because warmer air is all that is available, however there IS colder air available, it descends from higher altitudes. In fact it descends because it is colder.