Clouds
Steven Dutch, Natural and Applied Sciences, University of Wisconsin - Green Bay
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There's nothing magic about identifying clouds. If they look like flat
sheets, they are flat sheets. If they look low, they are low. Many things in
science are not what they seem. Clouds, on the other hand, are pretty
much what they seem.

Clouds are classified as sheetlike (stratiform) or vertical, and stratiform
clouds are classified by level. Of course clouds can occur at any level.

Clouds are further subdivided by degree of stratiform or vertical
development. Stratiform clouds at mid- to upper levels have the suffix -stratus,
those with some vertical structure have the suffix -cumulus.
Low Clouds
Fog
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Fog is merely a cloud at ground level |
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Stratus
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Low sheetlike clouds are called stratus. |
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Nimbostratus
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Very low-hanging rain clouds are sometimes termed
nimbostratus. |
Stratocumulus
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Low sheet-like clouds with some vertical structure are
stratocumulus. |
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Stratocumulus from above. |
Intermediate Clouds
Altostratus
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Featureless blah skies like this are usually altostratus.
The term "overcast" usually means altostratus if the weather is
otherwise fair. |
Altocumulus
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High overcast with a hint of puffy structure is altocumulus |
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High Clouds
Cirrus
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Wispy, fibrous-looking high ice clouds are cirrus. |
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Cirrostratus
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Cirrostratus is cirrus that is thick and continuous enough
to form a solid sheet. It is usually thinner and less opaque than
altostratus. Often they produce haloes around the sun and moon. |
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Below: cirrostratus can give otherwise sunny days a cold,
grim, and
cheerless look. |
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Left: A cirrostratus sheet with a sharp edge. |
Cirrocumulus
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Cirrocumulus are high clouds with just a bit of puffy
structure. They often form the rhythmic pattern nicknamed "mackerel
sky" (like fish scales) by sailors. |
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Vertical Clouds
Cumulus
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These highly photogenic clouds are identifiable by their
vertical structure. |
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Fair-weather cumulus, with high cirrus above them. |
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A very turbulent but non-violent sky. In autumn, the cool
air near the ground is often much warmer than very cold air above, so that
convection results in cumulus formation. It looks dramatic but seldom is
associated with bad weather |
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Hot air plus water vapor plus solar heat absorbed by dark
smoke combine to trigger the formation of a cumulus cloud over a large
forest fire. |
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Cumulus clouds from above. |
Cumulonimbus
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The most dramatic of clouds, distinguished by great vertical
development and a tendency to flare out into an "anvil" at the
top. |
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The anvil head is high enough to form cirrus. This anvil
head is from a storm that is already dissipating. Often the anvil head
will be visible after the cumulonimbus itself has disintegrated. |
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Special Clouds
Contrails
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Contrails (short for "condensation trails") are
artificial clouds produced by aircraft.
It's no accident that contrails tend to form when there are lots of
cirrus clouds. Jet engines alone do not produce enough water vapor to result in
long-lasting contrails. |
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Long lasting contrails form when the upper air is
supersaturated in water vapor, so that condensation of jet exhaust
triggers the condensation of yet more water vapor from the air. These
conditions tend to occur ahead of fronts, when cirrus clouds are likely to
be seen. In turn, contrails are significant contributors to cirrus cloud
formation. |
Lenticular
Mammatus
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Cold air sinking out of clouds can produce hanging bulges
called mammatus. |
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Extremely High Clouds
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Extremely high clouds are best seen at dusk, when they
remain illuminated long after lower clouds are dark.
These clouds are something of a mystery, since they are rare. Some are
natural, others can be high-altitude aircraft or rocket contrails. |
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Created 8 February, 1997
Last Update 23 January, 2001
Not an official UW-Green Bay site