No. Cumulonimbus clouds have flat bottoms and tops, but are very tall.
Tornadoes form in thunderstorms, which are composed of cumulonimbus clouds. Usually a tornado will form from a wall cloud that develops are the based of the cumulonimbus cloud, and will develop from a funnel cloud that comes out of the wall cloud.
the big rain cloud is the cloud that makes big rain.
A cumulonimbus cloud.
Cumulonimbus incus, which has an obvious anvil top. Only very strong ones, called supercells, spawn tornadoes.Cumulonimbus icnus is the most likely type of storm cloud to produce a tornado. These cumulonimbus clouds are often supercells.Tornadoes can form from any cumulonimbus cloud, but they usually form from Cumulonimbus incus (heaped rain cloud with anvil) with a rotating updraft called a mesocyclone. The type of storm this rotating cumulonimbus cloud brings is a strong thunderstorm called a supercell, the thunderstorm most likely to form a tornadocumulonimbus clouds
None do. It is the other way around. Tornadoes form from cumulonimbus clouds.
cumulonimbus cloud
cumulonimbus, sometimes called a thunderhead.
Stratus
What causes a cumulonimbus cloud is the cold and warm fronts that colided.
There is no such thing as a cumulonimbus tornado. A cumulonimbus cloud is a ver large towering cloud. Most thunderstorms are cumulonimbus clouds, and some of the strongest of these storms are what produce tornadoes.
The entire thunderstorm is a cumulonimbus cloud.
cumulonimbus clouds. They are puffy that appear to rise up from a flat bottom.
cumulonimbus
A cumulonimbus cloud produces rain.
A cumulonimbus cloud produces rain.
An anvil head cloud is called a cumulonimbus or a very well developed anvil shape is a cumulonimbus incus. These clouds are usually associated with severe thunderstorms and possibly tornadoes.
A tornado has a funnel and is at the bottom of a cumulonimbus cloud. If its winds do not reach the ground, though it is just a funnel cloud.