Clouds are generally categorized in three groups: Stratus (lower clouds), Alto (mid-level clouds), and Cirrus (high-level clouds). Alto clouds are found between approximately 2000M to 7000M. The "stratus" in the word altostratus refers to the form of the clouds, in this case, they are stratified, or flat, as opposed to cumuliform clouds which are vertical in structure.
When something is described as a "A cloudy day" it is usually stratus clouds. They are often mistaken as plain fog and are very low in the sky. Though I'm not completely sure, I think stratus clouds are normally ground level to 6,000 feet.
The altitude range of a Stratus cloud is 30,000 feet above sea level!
They form at 1-3 miles.
Cirrus clouds are formed at a higher altitude then stratus clouds. Cirrus clouds are formed at about 8,000 m. Stratus clouds are formed under 2,000m. Fog is actually a stratus cloud that forms near the ground.
mistFoganother name for it is fogFog.Fogvery low clouds are called stratus clouds ;PFogfogits called fog...mist, fogFOG
Cirrus Clouds= Above 18,000 ft Status Clouds= Below 6,000 ft
The highest clouds are polar mesospheric clouds, which, at heights from 76,000 to 85,000 m (altitude) are much higher than other types of clouds, such as cirrus and cumulonimbus. Cumulonimbus can exceptionally reach 23,000 m at the very top of a peaked formation, but these clouds normally form mainly within the 2,000 to 16,000 m range. Cirrus clouds, at a maximum height of about 18,000 m in tropical zones, are also much lower than polar mesosphericclouds.
Low clouds are in the stratus group, consisting of stratus, nimbostratus, and stratocumulus. These clouds range up to 6,500-feet. Stratus clouds often resemble fog, and mist sometimes falls from the clouds.
Stratus clouds are usually found closer to the ground. They have an altitude range of 0-6600ft
stratus, stratocumulus, and nimbostratus clouds
Stratus clouds are found In a low altitude place either after it has rained or before
Yes.
Cirrus clouds are formed at a higher altitude then stratus clouds. Cirrus clouds are formed at about 8,000 m. Stratus clouds are formed under 2,000m. Fog is actually a stratus cloud that forms near the ground.
Stratus clouds are flat, hazy, featureless clouds of low altitude varying in color from dark gray to nearly white. Stratus clouds may produce light snow or drizzle. Their altitude is usually below 6,000 feet.
Nimbo-stratus and stratus clouds form at low altitudes.
The different names for clouds are cirrus, stratus, cumulus, and altostratus. While stratus clouds are at an altitude that is below 6000 feet, cirrus clouds are high clouds that form above 20,000 feet.
mistFoganother name for it is fogFog.Fogvery low clouds are called stratus clouds ;PFogfogits called fog...mist, fogFOG
Cirrus Clouds= Above 18,000 ft Status Clouds= Below 6,000 ft
The highest clouds are polar mesospheric clouds, which, at heights from 76,000 to 85,000 m (altitude) are much higher than other types of clouds, such as cirrus and cumulonimbus. Cumulonimbus can exceptionally reach 23,000 m at the very top of a peaked formation, but these clouds normally form mainly within the 2,000 to 16,000 m range. Cirrus clouds, at a maximum height of about 18,000 m in tropical zones, are also much lower than polar mesosphericclouds.
Stratus or "blanket" clouds are usually low, featureless clouds that obscure all or part of the sun and sky. Higher altitude types are "altostratus" and "cirrostratus", which are formed from ice crystals.