A cumulus cloud looks like a big piece of floating cotton. They are mostly flat in the bottom and the top has rounded towers. They are also called towering cumulus.
"Calculus" This is one: Not a cloud formation as the others are. Two: Calculus is a type of mathematic word form.
Yes. The highest clouds are the cirrus clouds, which are thin, wispy, and white, and there are cirro-cumulus clouds, which are puffy clouds. The middle clouds are the altostratus clouds which blanket the sky. There is also the altocumulus clouds which is also a puffy cloud. Lastly, there is the cumulus cloud which is as well puffy. Finally, we have the lowest clouds. the first one is the stratocumulus cloud which is ALSO puffy. there is the nimbostratus cloud which produces rain. then there is the stratus cloud, also know as fog. Finally there is the cumulonibus cloud, also known as a thunderhead. it has not either a high, middle, or low cloud. it stretches from the high clouds to the low clouds. as you can guess by its name, it produces heavy rain and thunderstorms. There are many clouds with the same features but an easy way to remember them is by the parts of its name: cirro/cirrus- high alto- middle cumulus/cumulo- puffy nimbo/nimbus- produces rain stratus/strato- low
Cumulus clouds form when warm air rises, expands, and cools. Cumulus clouds are masses of puffy white clouds that usually have thunderstorms following them. Cumulus clouds are one of the 3 types of main clouds. The 3 main types of clouds are stratus, cumulus, and cirrus.
There are 4 types of clouds namely cirrous,cumulus ,nimbus and another one cloud(which is very black) out of these cirrous clouds are the bright white clouds which u can see in morning during sunny days.
one is more fluffy then the other
a cumulus cloud
Cirrus, cumulus, and stratus are cloud types. Calculus is a branch of mathematics.
cumulus clouds and white and very puffy. they bunch up as one instead of being separate clouds.
"Calculus" This is one: Not a cloud formation as the others are. Two: Calculus is a type of mathematic word form.
The Latin stratus, "spread out" or "layer", and the Latin cumulus, "clumped" or "heaped", were combined to describe this class of cloud, which is a high layer of thick, dark clouds. Clouds were first classified by the English scientist Luke Howard in the early 1800's. (see link)
Yes. The highest clouds are the cirrus clouds, which are thin, wispy, and white, and there are cirro-cumulus clouds, which are puffy clouds. The middle clouds are the altostratus clouds which blanket the sky. There is also the altocumulus clouds which is also a puffy cloud. Lastly, there is the cumulus cloud which is as well puffy. Finally, we have the lowest clouds. the first one is the stratocumulus cloud which is ALSO puffy. there is the nimbostratus cloud which produces rain. then there is the stratus cloud, also know as fog. Finally there is the cumulonibus cloud, also known as a thunderhead. it has not either a high, middle, or low cloud. it stretches from the high clouds to the low clouds. as you can guess by its name, it produces heavy rain and thunderstorms. There are many clouds with the same features but an easy way to remember them is by the parts of its name: cirro/cirrus- high alto- middle cumulus/cumulo- puffy nimbo/nimbus- produces rain stratus/strato- low
Cumulus clouds form when warm air rises, expands, and cools. Cumulus clouds are masses of puffy white clouds that usually have thunderstorms following them. Cumulus clouds are one of the 3 types of main clouds. The 3 main types of clouds are stratus, cumulus, and cirrus.
A large, white, fluffy cloud that generally appears during fair weather, although they also form thunderheads on hot days, and some can carry rain. (These are what children always draw when asked to draw a cloud.) Appear at roughly 6500 to 20000 feet. Composed mainly of water droplets. I read it goodly
it depends on what caused it to form. It can take a few minutes to a few hours.
An Okta is a measurement unit used to describe cloud cover over a defined area. In aviation 10% cloud cover is considered one peg up from clear to a few clouds, mainly scattered.
The lifetime of a cloud can vary greatly depending on factors like temperature, humidity, and air currents. On average, a cumulus cloud may last for about 10-15 minutes, while a cirrus cloud can persist for several hours. Some clouds, like stratocumulus or nimbostratus, can last for hours or even days.
Cumulus clouds typically form in fair weather conditions when warm air rises and cools, causing water vapor to condense into cloud droplets. These clouds are often associated with sunny skies and light winds. Cumulus clouds are usually fluffy and white in appearance, with a flat base and a puffy top.