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Clouds (from above)
Clouds form when the dewpoint of water is reached in the presence of condensation nuclei in the troposphere. Atmosphere is a dynamic system, and the local conditions of turbulence, uplift and other parameters give rise to many types of clouds. Various types of clouds occur frequently enough to have acquired a name of their own, often these are further specified with additional descriptive name. Furthermore, some atmospheric processes can make the clouds organize in distinct patterns such as 'wave cloud' or 'actinoform cloud', these are large scale structures and not always readily identifiable from single point of view.
Cirrus clouds form above 23,000 feet (about 6,000 m), in the cold region of the troposphere. They are denoted by the prefix cirro- or cirrus. At this altitude water almost always freezes so clouds are composed of ice crystals. The clouds tend to be wispy, and are often transparent. Isolated cirrus clouds often indicate a stable situation and do not bring precipitation, however, large amounts of cirrus clouds can indicate an approaching storm system.
Aircraft engines emit water vapour into the atmosphere, and this vapour is then frozen into ice crystals. These are known as condensation trails (contrails) or cirrus aviaticus.
Medium-level clouds
Altostratus
Abbreviation: As
Altostratus clouds form when a large lifted air mass is condensed, usually from a frontal system, and can bring rain or snow.
Stratus clouds are horizontal layer like clouds having a uniform base,which is associated with widespread precipitation or ocean air, and often produce drizzle.
Cumulus Castellanus -- The towering buidup is cumulus castellanus.
Cumulus clouds are sometimes called fair weather clouds but can grow into more storm-condition clouds (cumulonimbus, for example), and continued upward growth suggests showers later in the day.
Cumulonimbus praecipitatio - Cb whose precipitation reaches the ground
Cumulonimbus spissatus - cumulonimbus with a thick grey appearance
Cumulonimbus tuba - column hanging from the bottom of cumulonimbus
Cumulonimbus velum - cumulonimbus displaying an undulating pattern
Debris cloud – rotating ‘cloud’ of debris found at base of tornado
Hail fog - a shallow surface layer of fog that sometimes forms in vicinity of deep hail accumulation, can be very dense
Inflow band - a laminar band marking inflow to a Cb, can occur at lower or mid levels of tower
Inverted cumulus - cumulus which has transferred momentum from an exceptionally intense Cb tower and is convectively growing on the underside of an anvil
Fractonimbus - dark ragged clouds under base of precipitation cloud.
Funnel cloud – rotating funnel of cloud hanging from under Cb, not making contact with ground
Knuckles – lumpy protrusion that hangs from edge or underside of anvil
Roll cloud – elongated, low-level, tube shaped, horizontal cloud
Rope cloud – (slang) narrow, sometimes twisted funnel type cloud seen after tornado dissipates
Striations - a groove or band of clouds encircling an updraft tower, indicative of rotation
Tail cloud - an area of condensation consisting of laminar band and cloud tags extending from a wall cloud towards a precipitation core
Towering cumulus (TCu) - a large cumulus cloud with great vertical development, usually with a cauliflower-like appearance, but lacking the characteristic anvil of a Cb
Wall cloud – distinctive fairly large lowering of the rain free base of a Cb, often rotating