No -- they bring rain.
they bring sun and clouds .
AnswerPrecipitation which means rain, Clouds, Low Temperatures.
Cumulus and cumulonimbus clouds typically form where warm air rises rapidly. The warm air cools as it ascends, causing water vapor to condense and form clouds. Cumulus clouds are puffy and often indicate fair weather, while cumulonimbus clouds are larger and can bring thunderstorms.
Warm moist air masses typically bring rain, clouds, and possibly thunderstorms to an area due to the instability and high moisture content in the air. The warm air rises, cools, and condenses into clouds and precipitation, leading to wet and humid conditions.
If an unstable air mass is forced upwards, you can expect cumulonimbus clouds to form. These clouds are associated with thunderstorms and can bring heavy rain, lightning, and strong winds. The instability in the air mass allows for rapid vertical development of these clouds.
Stratocumulus, nimbostratus, or cumulonimbus clouds can form behind a front, typically associated with cooler air moving in. These clouds can bring precipitation and sometimes thunderstorms depending on the atmospheric conditions.
Stratiform clouds such as nimbostratus clouds typically develop along warm fronts and bring steady, prolonged precipitation. These clouds form as the warm air gradually overrides cooler air, leading to a steady and uniform rainfall pattern as the warm air rises and cools along the frontal boundary.
You mean stratus clouds? Stratus clouds can bring rain but not tornadoes.
Many cumulonimbus clouds do bring hail, but most don't
stratus clouds
Condensed moisture suspended in air molecules are known as clouds. Stratus clouds are layered and can bring overcast conditions, while cirrus clouds are wispy and high-altitude clouds often indicating fair weather. Both types of clouds consist of water droplets or ice crystals that have condensed from water vapor in the atmosphere.
Yes, nimbus clouds bring rain, sleet, snow, etc.