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Clouds are classified on the basis of their form and height.
stratuscumulus
Luke Howard, born in 1772 in London, came up with the names for clouds based on a classification system he developed.
Lightning typically comes from the elctrical static in clouds. However it can also come up from the ground and intermingle with a bolt of lightning coming down from the clouds. But mostly from the clouds above.Sandman
Clouds get their shape from the amount of air and water in them. These 2 elements form a cloud and it's shape.AnswerDepends of the temperature of the cloud, if the cloud have ice cristals, will be different than if it has only water vapor, or different percentage of both.
That is cumulo-nimbus
Stratiform clouds are layered clouds and they have very horizontal extent. Cumuliform clouds tops look like a popcorn, cotton ball or like cauliflower.
Cumulus clouds are the extremely puffy clouds in the sky. The base of the cloud is usually flat and is topped by billowing towers of puffy white clouds resembling cauliflower heads.
dont know. thats why im asking
There are clouds in both hurricanes and tornadoes. While a hurricane consists of one enormous cloud mass, a tornado consists of a funnel cloud extending from the base of a thunderstorm.
Catching Your Clouds only consists of Drake Christopher Henning. He is a solo musician.
electrons have no specified space to be.but normally the most electronic density is around the nuclear of the atom in a globular shape.
they are mid altitude clouds, forms when warm air rises, they are also puffy, white clouds that tend to have flat bottoms, and they indicate fair weather
Snow comes from clouds bearing the gaseous form of whatever the snow consists of. On Earth, the clouds bear moisture and the snow consists of frozen water. On the average, the flakes fall in a preferential direction because of the gravitational acceleration of the planet in proximity to which this is all happening. In space ... without clouds, gas, moisture, water, or a whole lot of gravity ... snow doesn't stand a chance.
Yes, often they do. This structure is often called an anvil.
This is false: fog consists of clouds whose base is near or on the surface of the ground or water.
Charles John Philip Cave has written: 'Clouds and weather phenomena for artists and other lovers of nature' -- subject(s): Clouds 'The structure of the atmosphere in clear weather' -- subject(s): Accessible book, Atmosphere 'Clouds and weather phenomena' -- subject(s): Clouds