Cloud types

From Academic Kids Online Encyclopedia

Contents

High-level clouds


Cirrus

Clouds (from above)
Enlarge
Clouds (from above)

Abbreviation: Ci

These form above 16,500 feet (5,000 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.

cirrus
cirrus castellanus
cirrus radiatus
cirrus uncinus
cirrus fibratus
cirrus spissatus
cirrus intortus
cirrus vertebratus
cirrus floccus
cirrus duplicatus
cirrus with mammatus
cirrus kelvin-helmholtz

Isolated cirrus clouds often indicate a stable situation and do not bring precipitation.

Cirrocumulus

Abbreviation: Cc cirrocumulus undulatus
cirrocumulus castellanus
cirrocumulus floccus
cirrocumulus lenticularis
cirrocumulus lacunosus
cirrocumulus with mammatus

Cirrocumulus clouds are often associated with a front but do cause precipitation.

Cirrostratus

Abbreviation: Cs cirrostratus duplicatus
cirrostratus nebulosus
cirrostratus fibratus
cirrostratus undulatus

Cirrostratus clouds are often translucent and do not bring precipitation

Contrail

Aircraft engines emit water vapour into the atmosphere, and this vapour is then frozen into ice crystals. These are known as condensation trails (contrails).


Medium-level clouds

Altostratus

Abbreviation: As

altostratus undulatus
altostratus radiatus
altostratus lenticularis
altostratus duplicatus
altostratus translucidus
altostratus opacus
altostratus mammatus
altostratus praecipitatio

Altostratus is usually associated with a weather front and can bring rain or snow.

Altocumulus

Missing image
Bluemamatus.jpg
altocumulus with mammatus

Abbreviation: Ac

altocumulus duplicatus
altocumulus undulatus
altocumulus stratiformis
altocumulus castellanus
altocumulus radiatus
altocumulus floccus
altocumulus lacunosus
altocumulus translucidus
altocumulus perlucidus
altocumulus opacus
altocumulus with mammatus
altocumulus virga

Altocumulus is not usually associated with a front but can still bring rain or snow

Nimbostratus

Abbreviation: Ns

nimbostratus opacus
nimbostratus pannus
nimbostratus praecipitatio
nimbostratus virga
nimbostratus floccus

Nimbostratus tend to bring constant precipitation


Low-level clouds

Stratocumlus

Abbreviation: Sc

stratocumulus opacus
stratocumulus undulatus
stratocumulus castellanus
stratocumulus floccus
stratocumulus lenticularis
stratocumulus radiatus
stratocumulus lacunosus
stratocumulus duplicatus
stratocumulus translucidus
stratocumulus perlucidus
stratocumulus mammatus
stratocumulus praecipitatio

Stratocumulus can produce rain or drizzle

Stratus

Abbreviation: St

stratus opacus
stratus nebulosus
stratus translucidus
stratus undulatus
stratus lenticularis
stratus fractus
stratus praecipitatio

Stratus can often produce drizzle

Cumulus

Abbreviation: Cu

cumulus humilis
cumulus fractus
cumulus mediocris
cumulus congestus
orographic
cumulus radiatus
cumulus praecipitatio
arcus
tuba
pileus
velum
pannus

Cumulus is sometimes called fair weather cloud but can develop into more stormy conditions

Vertically developed clouds

Cumulonimbus

Abbreviation: Cb

capillatus
calvus
incus
pileus
spissatus
mammatus
arcus
shelf
scud
roll
praecipitatio
tuba
velum
pannus

Cumulonimbus is the cloud of storms and rain or showers

Other clouds

Nacreous cloud (mother of pearl)

A thin cloud seen most often between sunset and sunrise and is between 12 to 18 miles (19 to 29 km) high

Noctilucent cloud

A thin cloud seen most often between sunset and sunrise and is 32 to 35 miles (51 to 56 km) high

The meaning of cloud names

Main cloud components

Altum - height

Cirrus – lock of hair

Cumulus – heaped

Nimbus – rain bearing

Stratus – layer

main cloud types

Cirrus – lock of hair

Cirrostratus – cirrus and stratus - lock of hair and layer

Cirrocumulus – cirrus and cumulus – lock of hair and heaped

Altostratus – altum and stratus – height and layer

Altocumulus – altum and cumulus – height and heaped

Nimbostratus – nimbus and stratus – rain bearing and layer

Stratocumulus – stratus and cumulus – layer and heaped

Stratus - layer

Cumulus - heaped

Cumulonimbus – cumulus and nimbus – heaped and rain bearing

Main sub-cloud types

Castellanus – castle-like with a series of turret shapes

Congestus – moderate development and heaped into cauliflower shapes

Fibratus – thin filament type clouds, can be straight or slightly curved

Floccus – looking like a tuft of wool, small congestus

Fractus – irregular shredded appearance

Humilis – small, low, flattened cumulus

Lenticularis – having a lens-like appearance

Mediocris – medium size cumulus with small bulges at the top

Nebulosus – indistinct cloud without features

Spissatus – thick cirrus with a grey appearance

Stratiformis – horizontal cloud sheet

Uncinus – cirrus with a hook shape at the top

Other cloud types

Missing image
Wavecloud.jpg
A translucent wave cloud

Arcus – arch or a bow – mostly attached to cumulus, thick with ragged edges

Duplicatus – double – partly merged layers of cloud

Incus – anvil - top part of CB cloud, anvil shaped

Intortus – twisted – curved and tangled cirrus

Mamma – cows udder – round pouches on surface of cloud

Lacunosus – full of holes – thin cloud distinguished by holes and ragged edges

Opacus – thick and shadowy – an opaque sheet of cloud

Pannus – shredded cloth – shredded sections attached to main cloud

Perlucidus – translucent – sheet of cloud with small spaces among itself

Pileus – capped – hood shaped cumulus type cloud

Praecipitatio – falling – cloud whose precipitation reaches the ground

Radiatus – radiant – parallel lines converging at a central point, often cirrus

Tuba – like a trumpet – column hanging from the bottom of cumulus

Translucidus – transparent – translucent patch or sheet

Undulatus – wavy – cloud displaying an undulating pattern

Velum - a ship’s sail – sail-like in appearance

Vertebratus – skeletal and bone like – cirrus arranged to look like bones or skeleton

Virga – stick or branch – precipitation that does not reach the ground

Storm Clouds

clouds associated with the development and duration of storms

Accessory Cloud – cloud that is attached to and develops on body of main cloud

Anvil – the top flatter part of a cumulonimbus cloud

Anvil Dome – the overshooting top on a CB that is often present on a supercell

Anvil Rollover – (slang) circular protrusion attached to underside of anvil

Back-sheared Anvil – (slang) anvil that spreads upwind, indicative of extreme weather

Cloud tags – ragged detached portions of cloud

Collar Cloud – rare ring shape surrounding upper part of wall cloud

Cumulus – heaped clouds

Cumulus arcus – arch or a bow shape, attached to cumulus, thick with ragged edges

Cumulus congestus – moderate development and heaped into cauliflower shapes

Cumulus fractus – ragged detached portions of cumulus cloud

Cumulus humilis - small, low, flattened cumulus, early development

Cumulus Mediocris - medium size cumulus with small bulges at the top

Cumulus pannus - shredded sections attached to main cumulus cloud

Cumulus pileus - capped – hood shaped cumulus cloud

Cumulus praecipitatio - cumulus whose precipitation reaches the ground

Cumulus radiatus – cumulus arranged in parallel lines

Cumulus tuba - column hanging from the bottom of cumulus

Cumulus velum - cumulus displaying an undulating pattern

Cumulonibus – rare cloud similar to mammatus, attached to underside of CB

Cumulonimbus – heaped towering rain-bearing clouds that stretch to the upper levels

Cumulonimbus arcus - arch or a bow shape, attached to cumulonimbus

Cumulonimbus calvus – cumulonimbus whose upper parts have lost their shape

Cumulonimbus capillatus - CB whose upper parts have taken on a cirrus-like form

Cumulonimbus incus – CB with anvil aloft

Cumulonimbus mammutus - pouch-like protrusions that hang from under an anvil

Cumulonimbus pannus - shredded sections attached to main CB cloud

Cumulonimbus pileus - capped – hood shaped cumulonimbus cloud

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

Funnel Cloud – funnel of cloud hanging from under CB but not making contact with ground

Knuckle Cloud – lumpy protrusion that hangs from edge or underside of anvil

Roll Cloud – elongated, low-level, tube shaped, horizontal cloud

Rope Cloud – narrow, sometimes twisted funnel type cloud seen after tornado dissipates

Scud Cloud – ragged detached portions of cloud

Shelf Cloud – wedge shaped cloud often attached to the underside of CB

Wall Cloud – distinctive fairly large lowering of the rain free base of a CB, often rotating

External links

  1. S'COOL Cloud Types Tutorial (http://asd-www.larc.nasa.gov/SCOOL/tutorial/clouds/cloudtypes.html)
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