1 / 23

Mr. Hartwell -- F-M Meteorology

Mr. Hartwell -- F-M Meteorology. Cloud Types & Properties. Clouds. Formed when moist air is cooled enough to allow saturation & condensation to take place. Saturation : air is completely filled with water vapor Condensation : phase change from gas to liquid. Clouds cont.

Télécharger la présentation

Mr. Hartwell -- F-M Meteorology

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Mr. Hartwell -- F-M Meteorology Cloud Types & Properties

  2. Clouds • Formed when moist air is cooled enough to allow saturation & condensation to take place. • Saturation: air is completely filled with water vapor • Condensation: phase change from gas to liquid

  3. Clouds cont. • Different types form based on: • Amount of moisture in the air • Vertical air temperature through troposphere • Character of rising air (speed & location) • Approaching weather systems • Identified by: • Shape • Height • Composition • Character (puffy vs. layered) Cloud types used as forecasting tools!

  4. Classification—Type #1 • Cirrus —feathery, wispy, thin

  5. Classification—Type #2 • Cumuliform —puffy, round, pretty

  6. Classification—Type #3 • Stratiform —layered, sheet-like, strata=layers (like rocks)

  7. Classification—Type #4 • Nimbus —produces precipitation

  8. Heights (HIGH): CIRRUS (Ci) • Cirrus — made of ice crystals • Align with upper level winds • Indicate fair weather conditions Aka: Mare’s Tails (look like horse’s tails)

  9. Heights (HIGH): Cirrocumulus (Cc) • Cirrocumulus — ice crystals • Occur in moist & unstable air (aloft) • Appear with precip.-causing weather (warm fronts) Aka: “Mackerel sky, not three days dry”

  10. Heights (HIGH): Cirrostratus (Cs) • Cirrostratus — ice crystals • Common in winter with precip.-causing weather • Produce sun dogs & halos

  11. Sun Dog Halos

  12. Heights (Middle) : Altocumulus (Ac) • Occur in moist air that is lifting • Fist-thumb-pinkeytip rule • Altocumulus = thumb size • Signals approaching storm system

  13. Heights (Middle) : Altostratus (As) • Layered; liquid water • Gray to pale blue • Occurs where moist air is rising slowly • Just ahead of rainy weather

  14. Heights (Low) : Cumulus (Cu) • Puffy, white, pretty • Indicates fair weather • Well-defined bases • Caused by humid air rising in bubbles

  15. Heights (Low) : Cumulus Congestus • Aka: towering cumulus • Atmosphere is very unstable • Indicates stormy conditions later in the day

  16. Heights (Low) : Status (St) • Sheet cloud; layers • Hovers just above the ground (was fog?) • No precip., but may be misty

  17. Precipitating Clouds: Nimbostratus (Ns) • Same as stratus, just precipitating • Precedes warmth (occur before warm fronts)

  18. Precipitating Clouds: Cumulonimbus (Cb) • Thunderstorm! • Can poke into stratosphere • Associated with severe weather • Anvil shape tops with mammatus clouds

  19. Precipitating Clouds: Cumulonimbus (Cb)

  20. Precipitating Clouds: Cumulonimbus (Cb) Mammatus cloud (below) Anvil shape (above)

  21. Miscellaneous: Contrails

  22. Miscellaneous: Fallstreaks Formation: Sublimation of falling ice crystals carried by winds aloft

More Related