the troposphere.
Clouds are classified based on their altitude within the atmosphere and their appearance. Altitude classifications include high-level clouds, middle-level clouds, and low-level clouds. Appearance classifications include cumulus clouds (puffy and white), stratus clouds (layered and covering the sky), and cirrus clouds (thin and wispy).
Clouds that are very high in the atmosphere are called cirrus clouds. These clouds are composed of ice crystals and usually appear wispy and thin. They form at altitudes above 20,000 feet and are often associated with fair weather.
Jupiter is the planet known for having white ammonia clouds in its atmosphere. These clouds are formed in Jupiter's upper atmosphere, primarily made up of ammonia crystals.
That's right, cirrus clouds are the highest clouds.
Yes. All clouds are in the atmosphere.
No. The air is the atmosphere.
a
Evaporated water condenses in the atmosphere to form clouds.
The clouds that we normally see, such as rain clouds, are in the Earth's atmosphere and therefore are not in space. However, there do exist clouds in space, which have been observed by astronomers. They do not have the same chemical composition as clouds in our atmosphere.
Clouds belong to the atmosphere sphere, while soil belongs to the geosphere sphere.
Ceres has no meaningful atmosphere, so no, it has no clouds.
Pluto has no atmosphere, so no clouds.
The moon has no atmosphere to support clouds.
no Pluto dose not have clouds because of the atmosphere .
Types of clouds that form in the lower atmosphere include cumulus clouds, stratus clouds, and stratocumulus clouds. These clouds typically indicate stable weather conditions and are found at lower altitudes.
Clouds are a natural part of the atmosphere, they consist of water vapour, which generally speaking isn't harmful.