A cloud is a visible mass of liquid droplets or frozen crystals suspended in the atmosphere.
VisibleA cloud is a visible mass of liquid droplets or frozen crystals suspended in the atmosphere.
Clouds are a visible mass of liquid droplets, frozen crystals, or a mixture of both floating in the free air. While on Earth, clouds are generally formed of water droplets and ice crystals, clouds also form on other planets and moons, depending on their atmospheric conditions. Venus has clouds composed largely of sulfuric acid in its carbon dioxide atmosphere, Mars has clouds of both water and carbon dioxide ice particles, and clouds on the gas giants are primarily formformed of methane and ammonia in their hydrogen-dominant atmosphere.
On Earth, clouds form when invisible water vapor in the atmosphere condenses into visible droplets. Many different types of clouds exist, and they play an important part in the Earth's weather and climate. At night, clouds reflect heat back to the Earth's surface increasingand temperatureskeep it warm. During the day, clouds produce shade, keeping the Earth cooler. Cloud formation and the condensation of water vapor lead to precipitation. As clouds gather more water and the size of droplets/crystals increaseincreases, gravity causes them to fall back to Earth as precipitation. The branch of meteorology regarding the study of clouds is known as nephology.
Clouds generally form in the troposphere, the layer of the atmosphere closest to the surface of the Earth. For water vapor to condense into water droplets or ice crystals, the parcel of air must be saturated; i.e., i.e. it is unable to hold all the water it contains in vapor form. Saturation can occur in one of two ways:
Cooling air is typically what causes clouds to form, with the temperature drop occurring when air rises. As air moves up through the atmosphere, the pressure drops, and this allows it to expand and therefore cool, a process known as adiabatic cooling. The cooling rate as air rises depends on the water content or humidity of the air, with higher humidity causing air to retain heat and cool more slowly. Generally, speaking the temperature drops 1oC for every 100 meters whichthat air rises. With lower temperatures and pressure, the vertical ascent reduces the amount of water vapor it can hold, increasing condensation. The height at which the dew point is reached and clouds start forming is called the condensation level.
There are five factors that cause air to rise, leading to cloud formation, these are:
Typical water droplets formed during cloud formation have a diameter of about a hundredth of a millimeter, and each cubic meter of air contains roughly 100 million droplets. These small droplets can remain in liquid form until temperatures drop to around -30oC,; these are known as supercooled droplets. At higher altitudes where temperatures drop below this point, clouds contain ice crystals about a tenth of a millimeter long.
For clouds to form, water vapor needs something to condense onto. Cloud condensation nuclei (CCN) are small particles floating in the atmosphere that enable condensation when the air is saturated. CCNs are a subset of hygroscopic (attracts waterwater-attracting) aerosol particles that nucleate water droplets. CCNs must be small particles that do not settle too fast. Most are soluble, although insoluble CCNs also produce cloud formation.
Most CCN particles originate from emissions on the Earth's surface. Primary aerosols are emitted directly from the source, whereas secondary aerosols are gaseous emissions converted to aerosol particles after reactions in the atmosphere. CCNs are produced by both natural and human-made (anthropogenic) processes.
Natural CCN sources include the following:
Anthropogenic CCN sources include the following:
Clouds also form when more water vapor is added to the air. This is particularly prevalent as air accumulates more moisture when passing over lakes. The lake effect refers to cold, dry air flowing across relatively warm lakes, gathering heat and moisture from evaporated lake water. This water vapor condenses into streamers of fog rising from the surface, much of which condenses to form clouds. This process commonly generates storms that produce significant snowfall downwind.
The International Cloud Atlas recognizes ten basic cloud genera defined according to where in the atmosphere they form (highhigh-, midmid-, and low-level clouds) and their approximate appearance. These ten genera are subdivided into "speciesspecies," describing their shape and internal structure, and "varietiesvarieties", which describe the transparency and arrangement of the clouds. Overall, there are roughly 100 combinations. Clouds that get to the ground or close to the earth’sEarth’s surface are called fog.
High-level clouds occur above roughly 20,000 feet. They are given the prefix "cirrocirro, which means " ascurl theyof hair." They primarily appear thin, streaky, and white (although at low sun angles they can appear in an array of colors), due to the cold tropospheric temperatures at these levels. High-level clouds are primarily are composed of ice crystals.
Detached clouds takingtake a wispy, feathery form that is composed entirely of ice crystals. They often are the first sign of an approaching warm front or upper-level jet streak. Cirrus clouds do not produce precipitation that reaches the ground. Before sunrise and after sunset, cirrus clouds are often colored bright yellow or red.
FormCirrostratus form a widespread, veil-like layer (similar to stratus clouds in low levels). When sunlight or moonlight passes through the hexagonal-shaped ice crystals of cirrostratus clouds, the light is dispersed or refracted. As a warm front approaches, cirrus clouds tend to thicken into cirrostratus, which may, in turn, thicken and lower into altostratus, stratus, and even nimbostratus.
Thin, white patch, sheet, or layered clouds are composed of very small elements in the form of more or less regularly arranged grains or ripples. GenerallyThey generally represent a degraded state of cirrus and cirrostratus. Cirrocumulus clouds are formed from smaller clouds called cloudlets. They are generally a sign of fair weather. Like cirrus, cirrocumulus clouds are formed by ice crystals.
Mid-level clouds appear between 6,500 and 20,000 feet and are given the prefix "altoalto." Depending on altitude, time of year, and the vertical temperature structure of the troposphere, these clouds can be composed of liquid water droplets, ice crystals, or a combination of the two, including supercooled droplets (i.e., liquid droplets whosewith temperatures are below freezing).
Mid-levelAltocumulus clouds are mid-level clouds with "cumulo" characteristics i.e. heap-likecharacteristics—heap-like clouds with convective elements. Similar to cirrocumulus, altocumulus clouds can align in rows or streets with axes indicating areas of ascending moist air and clear zones, suggesting descending drier air. WhiteThey are white and/or gray in color, and when a thin semitransparaentsemitransparent patch of altocumulus passes in front of the sun or moon, a corona appears.
CloudsAltostratus are clouds with a flat and uniform type texture in the mid-level of the atmosphere. Frequently, altocumulus clouds indicate the approach of a warm front, and they may thicken and lower into stratus, then nimbostratus clouds producing rain or snow. Although altostratus clouds rarely produce significant precipitation at the surface, occasionally light showers may occur from a thick alto-stratus deck.
Low-level clouds do not have a set prefix, although their names are derived from "stratostrato" (layered) or "cumulocumulo (heap)," depending on their characteristics. Low-level clouds occur below 6500 feet and consist of liquid water droplets or sometimes supercooled droplets,. duringDuring cold winter storms, they can also hold ice crystals (snow). Low-level clouds can be separated into those that develop horizontally, stratus, and (those that develop horizontally) andvertically, cumulus (develop vertically).
AStratus have a generally gray cloud layer with a uniform base, which may, if thick enough, produce drizzle, ice prisms, or snow grains. When the sun is visible through this cloud, its outline is clearly discernible. Sometimes stratus clouds appear as ragged sheets, theyand do notoccasionally produce a halo phenomenon except, occasionally at very low temperatures.
HybridStratocumulus are hybrid clouds of layered stratus and cellular cumulus, (i.e., individual cloud elements,) characteristic of cumulo type clouds, clumped together in a continuous distribution, characteristic of strato type clouds. Stratocumulus also can be thought of as a layer of cloud clumps with thick and thin areas. These clouds appear frequently in the atmosphere, either ahead of or behind a frontal system.
DetachedCumulus clouds are detached, generally dense clouds with sharp outlines that develop vertically in the form of rising mounds, domes, or towers with bulging upper parts that are sometimes described as resembling a cauliflower. Over-land cumulus clouds develop on clear sky days due to diurnal convection, and they appear in the morning, before dissolving in the evening. The sunlit top parts of cumulus clouds are white while their bases can appear relatively dark.
ThunderstormCumulonimbus clouds are thunderstorm clouds that are heavy and dense in the form of a mountain or huge tower. The upper portion is usually smoothed, fibrous, or striated and nearly always flattened in the shape of an anvil or vast plume. Cumulonimbus clouds also produce hail and tornadoes. Often under the base of Cumulonimbuscumulonimbus clouds, low ragged clouds appear whichthat may or may not merge with the base. These produce precipitation, sometime in the form of virga.
GenerallyNimbostratus are generally thick, dense stratus or stratocumulus clouds that produce steady rain or snow. Nimbostratus clouds result from thickening altostratus clouds. Darkclouds—dark, gray clouds that are thick enough to block sunlight. Low, ragged clouds frequently occur beneath nimbostratus clouds, which sometimes merge with the base. Although nimbostratus clouds can extend high into the atmosphere, during precipitation, the cloud base lowers. This causes confusion as to whether nimbostratus clouds should be classified as midmid- or low-level clouds.
Aside from altitude (genera), there are other ways of describing clouds based on different characteristics. Most genera are subdivided into species based on shape and internal structure. Therefore, a cloud is identified by its Latin genera name followed by a specific species name. Cloud species include the following:
Cloud varieties provide additional characteristics, such as relative transparency or a particular arrangement of its elements. Cloud varieties include the following:
Clouds sometimes have other features attached or merging with them, including:
Precipitation occurs when cloud particles grow large enough to fall and reach the ground before evaporating or sublimating. Condensation in the atmosphere is limited to producing droplets of roughly one-hundredth of an inch in diameter. This limit is the reason the vast majority of clouds do not produce rain. Raindrops range in size from 1/50 inch to 1/5 inch in diameter, and above this they tend to break up while falling. Droplet size due to condensation alone is caused by the following:
For droplet growth to raindrop size to take place, one or more of the precipitation processes is required. Much of the precipitation originating in high and mid-latitudes begins as snow at higher altitudes, melting to rain as it falls. The occurrence and intensity of precipitation depend on the availability of water vapor and on the concomitant mechanisms for nucleating and growing the particles. Sublimation (the direct transition of gas to a solid) can cause ice crystals to grow large enough to fall from the base of the cloud. However, sublimation can only produce crystals large enough for very light snow, or rain if the crystals melt while falling to the ground. Moderate or heavy precipitation requires additional processes,; the two main ones are the ice-crystal process and coalescence.
Clouds containing both ice crystals and supercooled liquid cloud droplets can undergo the ice-crystal process. The saturation vapor pressure differs with respect to liquid water and ice. At the same temperature, the saturation vapor pressure with respect to ice is lower than that of supercooled water. Therefore, if a cloud containing supercooled water is saturated with respect to water, it is supersaturated with respect to ice. The difference between vapor pressure over water and ice causes vapor molecules to be attracted to ice crystals, leading to significant ice crystal growth. This growth compounds the effect by reducing the humidity within the cloud causing existing liquid water to evaporate increasing the supply of water vapor crystallizing into ice. Ice crystals grow at the expense of water droplets until they reach a large enough size to fall out of the cloud as snowflakes, which can melt into raindrops as they fall.
Coalescence accounts for rain falling from clouds with temperatures above freezing. The process of condensation within clouds produces droplets of varying sizes that move at different speeds. This helps facilitate collisions where the droplets grow by fusing or coalescing. As droplets increase in size, they become more effective in the collecting process. Once they grow to the size that gravity causes them to drop from the cloud, they gather more drops on their path down through the cloud. The process of coalescence can also occur in clouds below freezing, with snowflakes coalescing with other snowflakes or supercooled water droplets to form snow pellets.
Studies based on almost a decade of satellite data estimate roughly 67% percent of Earth's surface is covered by clouds. Clouds are more prevalent over the oceans, withand research showingshows less than 10% percent of the sky is completely cloud-free at any one time. The map below shows the global cloud fraction (CF) based on data from the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) onboard the Aqua satellite. CF is a measure of the amount of clouds above a certain location, given as the fraction of the atmosphere volume or projected area occupied by clouds. The map shows the average of all observations taken between July 2002 and April 2015.
There are three broad bands that are most likely to be under cloud cover acover—a narrow band near the equator and two much wider strips in the mid-latitudes. The heavily cloudyclouded band near the equator is the result of the large-scale circulation patterns (Hadley cells) present in the tropics. Hadley cells are caused by cool air sinking near the 30o latitude lines on either side of the equator and warm air rising near the equator. As warm, moist air converges at low altitudes near the equator, it rises and cools causing water vapor to condense into clouds. This area produces a regular band of thunderstorms known as the inter-tropical convergence zone (ITCZ).
Other features present in the distribution of clouds are the following:
Jupiter and Saturn exhibit cloud tops that can be relatively identified and cover the majority of the surface. Uranus and Neptune are largely cloud-free. Clouds on the outer planets are formed from a collection of different condensable materials (volatiles) making up different layers. Cloud layers moving through a gas giant's atmosphere are formed of volatiles that condense at increasing pressure and temperature. The highest clouds on Uranus and Neptune are composed of crystals of methane ice, which cannot form on Jupiter or Saturn due to the higher temperature.
Clouds are a visible mass of liquid droplets, frozen crystals, or a mixture of both floating in the free air. While on Earth clouds are generally formed of water droplets and ice crystals, clouds also form on other planets and moons depending on their atmospheric conditions. Venus has clouds composed largely of sulfuric acid in its carbon dioxide atmosphere, Mars has clouds of both water and carbon dioxide ice particles, and clouds on the gas giants are primarily formedform of methane and ammonia in their hydrogen-dominant atmosphere.
Studies based on almost a decade of satellite data estimate roughly 67% of Earth's surface is covered by clouds. Clouds are more prevalent over the oceans with research showing less than 10% of the sky is completely cloud-free at any one time. The map below shows the global cloud fraction (CF) based on data from the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) onboard the Aqua satellite. CF is a measure of the amount of clouds above a certain location, given as the fraction of the atmosphere volume or projected area occupied by clouds. The map shows the average of all observations taken between July 2002 and April 2015.
There are three broad bands that are most likely to be under cloud cover a narrow band near the equator and two much wider strips in the mid-latitudes. The heavily cloudy band near the equator is the result of the large-scale circulation patterns (Hadley cells) present in the tropics. Hadley cells are caused by cool air sinking near the 30o latitude lines on either side of the equator and warm air rising near the equator. As warm, moist air converges at low altitudes near the equator, it rises and cools causing water vapor to condense into clouds. This area produces a regular band of thunderstorms known as the inter-tropical convergence zone (ITCZ).
The significant number of clouds forming in the middle latitude bands (60o north and south of the equator) is caused by the edges of the polar and mid-latitude (Ferrel) circulation cells colliding and pushing air upwards. This ascending air fuels the large-scale frontal systems dominating weather patterns in the mid-latitude region. The less cloudy regions between 15o and 30o degrees north and south of the equator are dominated by descending air that inhibits cloud formation, this also accounts for the prevalence of deserts at these latitudes.
Other features present in the distribution of clouds are:
The relationship between clouds and the wider climate is defined by a complex feedback system. Clouds affect the climate, modulating the solar radiation and water balance of the Earth, but in turn, the climate affects cloud formation and movement.
It is not well understood what the effect of climate change will be on weather patterns and whether the resulting cloud changes would diminish warming (negative feedback) or enhance warming (positive feedback).
Venus has a thick atmosphere of predominantly carbon dioxide. The planet is shrouded by yellowish clouds of sulfuric acid trapping heat and causing a runaway greenhouse effect. These clouds start at an altitude of 28 miles to 43 miles (45 to 70 kilometers). High in the clouds of Venus, the conditions are cooler and the pressure is similar to Earth's surface. This has led some scientists to theorize microbes might exist there. Phosphine a possible indicator of microbial life has also been observed in Venus' clouds.
Clouds are rare in the thin and dry atmosphere of Mars. They are most commonly found at the planet's equator in the coldest time of year when Mars is furthest away from the Sun. Martian clouds can be formed of water ice and carbon dioxide ice particles. The image below shows iridescent or "mother of pearl" clouds where the colors are caused by cloud particles of almost identical size. The image shows five frames stiched together from a wider panorama taken by Curiosity's Mastcam on March 5th, 2021.
Jupiter and Saturn exhibit cloud tops that can be relatively identified and cover the majority of the surface. Uranus and Neptune are largely cloud-free. Clouds on the outer planets are formed from a collection of different condensable materials (volatiles) making up different layers. Cloud layers moving through a gas giant's atmosphere are formed of volatiles that condense at increasing pressure and temperature. The highest clouds on Uranus and Neptune are composed of crystals of methane ice which cannot form on Jupiter or Saturn due to the higher temperature.
Cooling air is typically what causes clouds to form with the temperature drop occurring when air rises. As air moves up through the atmosphere the pressure drops, this allows it to expand and therefore cool, a process known as adiabatic cooling. The cooling rate as air rises depends on the water content or humidity of the air, with higher humidity causing air to retain heat and cool more slowly. Generally, speaking the temperature drops 1oC for every 100 meters which air rises. With lower temperatures and pressure the vertical ascent reduces the amount of water vapor it can hold, increasing condensation. The height at which the dew point is reached and clouds start forming is called the condensation level.
Detached, generally dense clouds with sharp outlines that develop vertically in the form of rising mounds, domes, or towers with bulging upper parts that are sometimes described as resembling a cauliflower. Over-land cumulus clouds develop on clear sky days due to diurnal convection, they appear in the morning, before dissolving in the evening. The sunlit top parts of cumulus clouds are white while their bases can appear relatively dark.
Thunderstorm clouds that are heavy and dense in the form of a mountain or huge tower. The upper portion is usually smoothed, fibrous, or striated and nearly always flattened in the shape of an anvil or vast plume. Cumulonimbus clouds also produce hail and tornadoes. Often under the base of Cumulonimbus clouds, low ragged clouds appear which may or may not merge with the base. These produce precipitation, sometime in the form of virga.
Precipitation occurs when cloud particles grow large enough to fall and reach the ground before evaporating or sublimating. Condensation in the atmosphere is limited to producing droplets of roughly one-hundredth of an inch in diameter. This limit is the reason the vast majority of clouds do not produce rain. Raindrops range in size from 1/50 inch to 1/5 inch in diameter, above this they tend to break up while falling. Droplet size due to condensation alone is caused by:
For droplet growth to raindrop size to take place, one or more of the precipitation processes is required. Much of the precipitation originating in high and mid-latitudes begins as snow at higher altitudes, melting to rain as it falls. The occurrence and intensity of precipitation depend on the availability of water vapor and on the concomitant mechanisms for nucleating and growing the particles. Sublimation (the direct transition of gas to a solid) can cause ice crystals to grow large enough to fall from the base of the cloud. However, sublimation can only produce crystals large enough for very light snow, or rain if the crystals melt while falling to the ground. Moderate or heavy precipitation requires additional processes, the two main ones are the ice-crystal process and coalescence.
Clouds containing both ice crystals and supercooled liquid cloud droplets can undergo the ice-crystal process. The saturation vapor pressure differs with respect to liquid water and ice. At the same temperature, the saturation vapor pressure with respect to ice is lower than that of supercooled water. Therefore, if a cloud containing supercooled water is saturated with respect to water it is supersaturated with respect to ice. The difference between vapor pressure over water and ice causes vapor molecules to be attracted to ice crystals, leading to significant ice crystal growth. This growth compounds the effect by reducing the humidity within the cloud causing existing liquid water to evaporate increasing the supply of water vapor crystallizing into ice. Ice crystals grow at the expense of water droplets until they reach a large enough size to fall out of the cloud as snowflakes, which can melt into raindrops as they fall.
Coalescence accounts for rain falling from clouds with temperatures above freezing. The process of condensation within clouds produces droplets of varying sizes that move at different speeds. This helps facilitate collisions where the droplets grow by fusing or coalescing. As droplets increase in size they become more effective in the collecting process. Once they grow to the size that gravity causes them to drop from the cloud they gather more drops on their path down through the cloud. The process of coalescence can also occur in clouds below freezing, with snowflakes coalescing with other snowflakes or supercooled water droplets to form snow pellets.
The naming of cloud classifications comes from a combining Latin prefixes and suffixes:
The International Cloud Atlas recognizes ten basic cloud genera defined according to where in the atmosphere they form (high, mid, and low-level clouds) and their approximate appearance. These ten genera are subdivided into "species," describing their shape and internal structure, and "varieties" which describe the transparency and arrangement of the clouds. Overall there are roughly 100 combinations. Clouds that get to the ground or close to the earth’s surface are called fog.
Aside from altitude (genera), there are other ways of describing clouds based on different characteristics. Most genera are subdivided into species based on shape and internal structure. Therefore, a cloud is identified by its Latin genera name followed by a specific species name. Cloud species include:
Cloud varieties provide additional characteristics such as relative transparency or a particular arrangement of its elements. Cloud varieties include:
The table below shows the species and varieties associated with each of the ten main cloud genera:
Clouds sometimes have other features attached or merging with them, including:
Clouds are a visible mass of liquid droplets, frozen crystals, or a mixture of both floating in the free air. While on Earth clouds are generally formed of water droplets and ice crystals, clouds also form on other planets and moons depending on their atmospheric conditions. Venus is perpetually surrounded byhas clouds composed largely of sulfuric acid in its carbon dioxide atmosphere and clouds on the gas giants are primarily formed of methane and ammonia in their hydrogen-dominant atmosphere.
High-level clouds occur above roughly 20,000 feet. They are given the prefix "cirro," as they primarily appear thin, streaky, and white (although at low sun angles they can appear in an array of colors) due to the cold tropospheric temperatures at these levels. High-level clouds primarily are composed of ice crystals
Detached clouds that taketaking a wispy, feathery form that is composed entirely of ice crystals. They often are the first sign of an approaching warm front or upper-level jet streak. Cirrus clouds do not produce precipitation that reaches the ground. Before sunrise and after sunset, cirrus clouds are often colored bright yellow or red.
Thin, white patch, sheet, or layered clouds composed of very small elements in the form of more or less regularly arranged grains or ripples. Generally represent a degraded state of cirrus and cirrostratus. Cirrocumulus clouds are formed from smaller clouds called cloudlets. They are generally a sign of fair weather. Like cirrus, cirrocumulus clouds are formed by ice crystals.
Mid-level clouds appear between 6,500 and 20,000 feet and are given the prefix "alto." Depending on altitude, time of year, and the vertical temperature structure of the troposphere, these clouds can be composed of liquid water droplets, ice crystals, or a combination of the two, including supercooled droplets (i.e., liquid droplets whose temperatures are below freezing).
Clouds with a flat and uniform type texture in the mid-level of the atmosphere. Frequently altocumulus clouds indicate the approach of a warm front and they may thicken and lower into stratus, then nimbostratus clouds producing rain or snow. Although altostratus clouds rarely produce significant precipitation at the surface, occasionally light showers may occur from a thick alto-stratus deck.
Mid-level clouds with "cumulo" characteristics i.e. heap-like clouds with convective elements. Similar to cirrocumulus, altocumulus clouds can align in rows or streets with axes indicating areas of ascending moist air and clear zones suggesting descending drier air. White and/or gray in color, when a thin semitransparaent patch of altocumulus passes in front of the sun or moon a corona appears.
Mid-level clouds with "cumulo" characteristics i.e. heap-like clouds with convective elements.
Clouds with a flat and uniform type texture in the mid-level of the atmosphere. Frequently altocumulus clouds indicate the approach of a warm front and they may thicken and lower into stratus, then nimbostratus clouds producing rain or snow. Although altostratus clouds rarely produce significant precipitation at the surface, occasionally light showers may occur from a thick alto-stratus deck.
Low-level clouds do not have a set prefix, although their names are derived from "strato" or "cumulo," depending on their characteristics. Low-level clouds occur below 6500 feet and consist of liquid water droplets or sometimes supercooled droplets, during cold winter storms they can also hold ice crystals (snow). Low-level clouds can be separated into stratus (develop horizontally) and cumulus (develop vertically).
A generally gray cloud layer with a uniform base which may, if thick enough, produce drizzle, ice prisms, or snow grains. When the sun is visible through this cloud, its outline is clearly discernible. Sometimes stratus clouds appear as ragged sheets, they do not produce a halo phenomenon except, occasionally at very low temperatures.
Detached, generally dense clouds with sharp outlines that develop vertically in the form of rising mounds, domes, or towers with bulging upper parts that are sometimes described as resembling a cauliflower. Over-land cumulus develop on clear sky days due to diurnal convection, they appear in the morning, before dissolving in the evening. The sunlit top parts of cumulus clouds are white while their bases can appear relatively dark.
Thunderstorm clouds that are heavy and dense in the form of a mountain or huge tower. The upper portion is usually smoothed, fibrous, or striated and nearly always flattened in the shape of an anvil or vast plume. Cumulonimbus clouds also produce hail and tornadoes. Often under the base of Cumulonimbus clouds low ragged clouds appear which may or may not merge with the base. These produce precipitation, sometime in the form of virga.
Generally thick, dense stratus or stratocumulus clouds that produce steady rain or snow.
Generally thick, dense stratus or stratocumulus clouds that produce steady rain or snow. Nimbostratus clouds result from thickening altostratus clouds. Dark gray clouds that are thick enough to block sunlight. Low, ragged clouds frequently occur beneath nimbostratus clouds which sometimes merge with the base. Although nimbostratus clouds can extend high into the atmosphere, during precipitation, the cloud base lowers. This causes confusion as to whether nimbostratus clouds should be classified as mid or low-level clouds.
1956
Volume I contains a descriptive and explanatory text on the whole range of hydrometeors (including clouds), lithometeors, photometeors, and electrometeors. Volume II contains a collection of 224 plates (123 in black and white and 101 in color) of photographs of clouds and of certain meteors.
1951
The organization's first meteorological congress noted the need for a new International Cloud Atlas and referred the task to the Commission for Synoptic Meteorology.
1939
1896
The atlas contains 28 colored plates accompanied by definitions and descriptions of clouds as well as instructions for cloud observing in three languages (French, English, and German). The atlas was based on work by Hildebrandsson and Ralph Abercromby.
1891
1879
Working in Uppsala Hildebrandsson prepared a cloud atlas of 16 photographs.
1813
Reprinting brings Howard's studies to a wider audience, inspiring JMW Turner's detailed cloud studies.
1803
1802
1802
The system separates clouds into three main types stratus, cumulus, and cirrus.
Clouds are a visible mass of liquid droplets, frozen crystals, or a mixture of both floating in the free air. While on Earth clouds are generally formed of water droplets and ice crystals, clouds also form on other planets and moons depending on their atmospheric conditions. Venus is perpetually surrounded by clouds composed largely of sulfuric acid in its carbon dioxide atmosphere and clouds on the gas giants are primarily formed of methane and ammonia in the hydrogentheir dominanthydrogen-dominant atmosphere.
On Earth, clouds form when invisible water vapor in the atmosphere condenses into visible droplets. Many different types of clouds exist and they play an important part in the Earth's weather and climate. At night clouds reflect heat back to the Earth's surface increasing temperatures. During the day clouds produce shade keeping the Earth cooler. Cloud formation and the condensation of water vapor lead to precipitation. As clouds gather more water and the size of droplets/crystals increase gravity causes them to fall back to earthEarth as precipitation The branch of meteorology regarding the study of clouds is known as nephology.
Clouds generally form in the troposphere, the layer of the atmosphere closest to the surface of the Earth. For water vapor to condense into water droplets or ice crystals, the parcel of air must be saturated, i.e. it is unable to hold all the water it contains in vapor form. Saturation can occur in one of two ways:
Cooling the air is typically howwhat causes clouds to form with the temperature drop causedoccurring bywhen air rising in the lower part of the atmosphererises. As air moves up through the atmosphere the pressure drops, this allows it to expand and therefore cool. The cooling rate as air rises depends on the water content or humidity of the air, with higher humidity causing air to retain heat and cool more slowly. Generally, speaking the temperature drops 1oC for every 100 meters which air rises. With lower temperatures and pressure the vertical ascent reduces the amount of water vapor it can hold, increasing condensation. The height at which the dew point is reached and clouds start forming is called the condensation level.
Clouds also form when more water vapor is added to the air. This is particularly prevalent as air accumulates more moisture when passing over lakes. The lake effect refers to cold dry air flowing across relatively warm lakes gathering heat and moisture from evaporated lake water. This water vapor condenses into streamers of fog rising from the surface, much of which condenses to form clouds. This process commonly generates storms that produce significant snowfall downwind.
Also referred to as homogenitus or artificial, anthropogenic clouds are clouds induced by human activity. Large-scale industrial facilities such as nuclear, thermal, and geothermal power plants can significantly alter local weather conditions, creating atmospheric conditions that enhance cloud formation.
The classification of clouds in use today is based on a system first proposed by Luke Howard, an English amateur meteorologist in 1802. Howard's system split clouds into three main types:
The naming of cloud classifications comes from a combining Latin prefixes and suffixes:
The International Cloud Atlas recognizes ten basic cloud genera defined according to where in the atmosphere they form (high, mid, and low-level clouds) and their approximate appearance. These ten genera are subdivided into "species," describing their shape and internal structure, and "varieties" which describe the transparency and arrangement of the clouds. Overall there are roughly 100 combinations.
Detached clouds that take a wispy, feathery form that is composed entirely of ice crystals. They often are the first sign of an approaching warm front or upper-level jet streak.
Form a widespread, veil-like layer (similar to stratus clouds in low levels). When sunlight or moonlight passes through the hexagonal-shaped ice crystals of cirrostratus clouds, the light is dispersed or refracted. As a warm front approaches, cirrus clouds tend to thicken into cirrostratus, which may, in turn, thicken and lower into altostratus, stratus, and even nimbostratus.
Thin, white patch, sheet, or layered clouds composed of very small elements in the form of more or less regularly arranged grains or ripples. Generally represent a degraded state of cirrus and cirrostratus.
Clouds with a flat and uniform type texture in the mid-level of the atmosphere. Frequently altocumulus clouds indicate the approach of a warm front and they may thicken and lower into stratus, then nimbostratus clouds producing rain or snow. Although altostratus clouds rarely produce significant precipitation at the surface, occasionally light showers may occur from a thick alto-stratus deck.
Mid-level clouds with "cumulo" characteristics i.e. heap-like clouds with convective elements.
A generally gray cloud layer with a uniform base which may, if thick enough, produce drizzle, ice prisms, or snow grains. When the sun is visible through this cloud, its outline is clearly discernible.
Hybrid clouds of layered stratus and cellular cumulus, i.e., individual cloud elements, characteristic of cumulo type clouds, clumped together in a continuous distribution, characteristic of strato type clouds. Stratocumulus also can be thought of as a layer of cloud clumps with thick and thin areas. These clouds appear frequently in the atmosphere, either ahead of or behind a frontal system.
Detached, generally dense clouds with sharp outlines that develop vertically in the form of rising mounds, domes or towers with bulging upper parts that are sometimes described as resembling a cauliflower.
Thunderstorm clouds that are heavy and dense in the form of a mountain or huge tower. The upper portion is usually smoothed, fibrous, or striated and nearly always flattened in the shape of an anvil or vast plume. Cumulonimbus clouds also produce hail and tornadoes.
Generally thick, dense stratus or stratocumulus clouds that produce steady rain or snow.
Clouds are a visible mass of liquid droplets, frozen crystals, or a mixture of both floating in the free air. While on Earth clouds are generally formed of water droplets and ice crystals, clouds also form on other planets and moons depending on their atmospheric conditions. Venus is perpetually surrounded by clouds composed largely of sulfuric acid in its carbon dioxide atmosphere and clouds on the gas giants are primarily formed of methane and ammonia in the hydrogen dominant atmosphere.
On Earth, clouds form when invisible water vapor in the atmosphere condenses into visible droplets. Many different types of clouds exist and they play an important part in the Earth's weather and climate. At night clouds reflect heat back to the Earth's surface increasing temperatures. During the day clouds produce shade keeping the Earth cooler. Cloud formation and the condensation of water vapor lead to precipitation. As clouds gather more water and the size of droplets/crystals increase gravity causes them to fall back to earth as precipitation The branch of meteorology regarding the study of clouds is known as nephology.
For water vapor to condense into water droplets or ice crystals, the parcel of air must be saturated, i.e. it is unable to hold all the water it contains in vapor form. Saturation can occur in one of two ways:
Cooling the air is typically how clouds form with the temperature drop caused by air rising in the lower part of the atmosphere. As air moves up through the atmosphere the pressure drops, this allows it to expand and therefore cool. The cooling rate as air rises depends on the water content or humidity of the air, with higher humidity causing air retain heat and cool more slowly. Generally, speaking the temperature drops 1oC for every 100 meters which air rises. With lower temperatures and pressure the vertical ascent reduces the amount of water vapor it can hold, increasing condensation. The height at which the dew point is reached and clouds start forming is called the condensation level.
There are five factors that cause air to rise leading to cloud formation, these are:
Typical water droplets formed during cloud formation have a diameter of about a hundredth of a millimeter and each cubic meter of air contains roughly 100 million droplets. These small droplets can remain in liquid form until temperatures drop to around -30oC, these are known as supercooled droplets. At higher altitudes where temperatures drop below this point, clouds contain ice crystals about a tenth of a millimeter long.
For clouds to form water vapor needs something to condense onto. Cloud condensation nuclei (CCN) are small particles floating in the atmosphere that enable condensation when the air is saturated. CCNs are a subset of hygroscopic (attracts water) aerosol particles that nucleate water droplets. CCNs must be small particles that do not settle too fast. Most are soluble, although insoluble CCNs also produce cloud formation.
Most CCN particles originate from emissions on the Earth's surface. Primary aerosols are emitted directly from the source whereas secondary aerosols are gaseous emissions converted to aerosol particles after reactions in the atmosphere. CCNs are produced by both natural and human-made (anthropogenic) processes.
Natural CCN sources include:
Anthropogenic CCN sources include:
A cloud is a visible mass of liquid droplets or frozen crystals suspended in the atmosphere.
In meteorology, a cloud is an aerosol consisting of a visible mass of minute liquid droplets, frozen crystals, or other particles suspended in the atmosphere of a planetary body or similar space. Water or various other chemicals may compose the droplets and crystals. On Earth, clouds are formed as a result of saturation of the air when it is cooled to its dew point, or when it gains sufficient moisture (usually in the form of water vapor) from an adjacent source to raise the dew point to the ambient temperature. They are seen in the Earth's homosphere, which includes the troposphere, stratosphere, and mesosphere. Nephology is the science of clouds, which is undertaken in the cloud physics branch of meteorology. There are two methods of naming clouds in their respective layers of the homosphere, Latin and common.Genus types in the troposphere, the atmospheric layer closest to Earth's surface, have Latin names because of the universal adoption of Luke Howard's nomenclature that was formally proposed in 1802. It became the basis of a modern international system that divides clouds into five physical forms which can be further divided or classified into altitude levels to derive ten basic genera. The main representative cloud types for each of these forms are stratus, cirrus, stratocumulus, cumulus, and cumulonimbus. Low-level clouds do not have any altitude-related prefixes. However mid-level stratiform and stratocumuliform types are given the prefix alto- while high-level variants of these same two forms carry the prefix cirro-. In both cases, strato- is dropped from the latter form to avoid double-prefixing. Genus types with sufficient vertical extent to occupy more than one level do not carry any altitude related prefixes. They are classified formally as low- or mid-level depending on the altitude at which each initially forms, and are also more informally characterized as multi-level or vertical. Most of the ten genera derived by this method of classification can be subdivided into species and further subdivided into varieties. Very low stratiform clouds that extend down to the Earth's surface are given the common names fog and mist, but have no Latin names.In the stratosphere and mesosphere, clouds have common names for their main types. They may have the appearance of stratiform veils or sheets, cirriform wisps, or stratocumuliform bands or ripples. They are seen infrequently, mostly in the polar regions of Earth. Clouds have been observed in the atmospheres of other planets and moons in the Solar System and beyond. However, due to their different temperature characteristics, they are often composed of other substances such as methane, ammonia, and sulfuric acid, as well as water.Part of a series onWeathershowTemperate and polar seasonsshowTropical seasonsshowStormsshowPrecipitationshowTopicsshowGlossaries Weather portalvteClouds (c. 1920s), a silent documentary film about clouds produced by the United States Department of Agriculture.Tropospheric clouds can have a direct effect on climate change on Earth. They may reflect incoming rays from the sun which can contribute to a cooling effect where and when these clouds occur, or trap longer wave radiation that reflects back up from the Earth's surface which can cause a warming effect. The altitude, form, and thickness of the clouds are the main factors that affect the local heating or cooling of Earth and the atmosphere. Clouds that form above the troposphere are too scarce and too thin to have any influence on climate change. Clouds are the main uncertainty in climate sensitivity.
In meteorology, a cloud is an aerosol consisting of a visible mass of minute liquid droplets, frozen crystals, or other particles suspended in the atmosphere of a planetary body or similar space. Water or various other chemicals may compose the droplets and crystals. On Earth, clouds are formed as a result of saturation of the air when it is cooled to its dew point, or when it gains sufficient moisture (usually in the form of water vapor) from an adjacent source to raise the dew point to the ambient temperature. They are seen in the Earth's homosphere, which includes the troposphere, stratosphere, and mesosphere. Nephology is the science of clouds, which is undertaken in the cloud physics branch of meteorology. There are two methods of naming clouds in their respective layers of the homosphere, Latin and common.Genus types in the troposphere, the atmospheric layer closest to Earth's surface, have Latin names because of the universal adoption of Luke Howard's nomenclature that was formally proposed in 1802. It became the basis of a modern international system that divides clouds into five physical forms which can be further divided or classified into altitude levels to derive ten basic genera. The main representative cloud types for each of these forms are stratus, cirrus, stratocumulus, cumulus, and cumulonimbus. Low-level clouds do not have any altitude-related prefixes. However mid-level stratiform and stratocumuliform types are given the prefix alto- while high-level variants of these same two forms carry the prefix cirro-. In both cases, strato- is dropped from the latter form to avoid double-prefixing. Genus types with sufficient vertical extent to occupy more than one level do not carry any altitude related prefixes. They are classified formally as low- or mid-level depending on the altitude at which each initially forms, and are also more informally characterized as multi-level or vertical. Most of the ten genera derived by this method of classification can be subdivided into species and further subdivided into varieties. Very low stratiform clouds that extend down to the Earth's surface are given the common names fog and mist, but have no Latin names.In the stratosphere and mesosphere, clouds have common names for their main types. They may have the appearance of stratiform veils or sheets, cirriform wisps, or stratocumuliform bands or ripples. They are seen infrequently, mostly in the polar regions of Earth. Clouds have been observed in the atmospheres of other planets and moons in the Solar System and beyond. However, due to their different temperature characteristics, they are often composed of other substances such as methane, ammonia, and sulfuric acid, as well as water.Part of a series onWeathershowTemperate and polar seasonsshowTropical seasonsshowStormsshowPrecipitationshowTopicsshowGlossaries Weather portalvteClouds (c. 1920s), a silent documentary film about clouds produced by the United States Department of Agriculture.Tropospheric clouds can have a direct effect on climate change on Earth. They may reflect incoming rays from the sun which can contribute to a cooling effect where and when these clouds occur, or trap longer wave radiation that reflects back up from the Earth's surface which can cause a warming effect. The altitude, form, and thickness of the clouds are the main factors that affect the local heating or cooling of Earth and the atmosphere. Clouds that form above the troposphere are too scarce and too thin to have any influence on climate change. Clouds are the main uncertainty in climate sensitivity.
Visible mass of liquid droplets or frozen crystals suspended in the atmosphere