39,000 feet and higher
6,500 ft to 60,000 ft
Cumulonimbus clouds are high clouds. The contain a large amount of moisture throughout and ice crystals at the top of the clouds. Strong convection currents and heavy winds are found in these clouds. Cumulonimbus clouds produce lightening and hail.
No. Cumulonimbus do. The clouds are low-based and high-topped.
No. Contrails are long, narrow, thin clouds left by aircraft at high altitude. Cumulonimbus clouds are enormous, thick, towering storm clouds.
Cumulonimbus clouds typically reach heights of 20,000 to 60,000 feet in the atmosphere.
Thunderstorms form in cumulonimbus clouds, which are large, towering clouds with great vertical development. These clouds can reach high into the atmosphere and produce heavy rainfall, lightning, thunder, and sometimes hail or tornadoes.
Cumulonimbus clouds are storm clouds.
the clouds are cumulonimbus clouds
Cumulonimbus clouds bring thunderstorms.
Cumulonimbus are the clouds of thunderstorms.
cumulonimbus clouds
Cumulonimbus clouds are also called thunderheads.
The type of cloud that produces thunderstorms is called a cumulonimbus cloud. These clouds are large, towering clouds that can reach high altitudes and are associated with heavy rainfall, thunder, lightning, and sometimes hail.