a storm cloud!!!!!!!!!!!! But b4 they get that robust, they're cumulus clouds.
Then grow into cumulonimbus bringing rain.cumulonimbus
A cumulus cloud is a type of cloud that is characterized by its puffy and fluffy appearance. These clouds typically indicate fair weather conditions, but they can also develop into larger storm clouds if they continue to grow vertically.
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
the big rain cloud is the cloud that makes big rain.
Nimbus is the Latin word for cloud. In modern meteorology, it is used as a prefix or suffix on the names of particular types of clouds to indicate a cloud that is precipitating (rain, snow, hail, etc.). Thus a cumulonimbusis a cumulus cloud that is releasing precipitation and a nimbostratus is a status cloud releasing precipitation.
"Precipitous" means a cloud brings rain.
cumulonimbus
The root word is "nimbus," which means a type of cloud that typically brings rain.
A cumulus cloud is a type of cloud that is characterized by its puffy and fluffy appearance. These clouds typically indicate fair weather conditions, but they can also develop into larger storm clouds if they continue to grow vertically.
rain
When the word "rain" is added to a cloud's name, it usually indicates that the cloud is actively producing rainfall. For example, a rain cloud like nimbostratus typically brings steady, prolonged rain due to its dense and thick structure.
wind helps in a flood because it brings the rain and it it's cloud are strong enough to produce rain.
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
"Precipitous" means a cloud brings rain.
it is from the midle level, and brings rain and thunder.
yes cloud formation can clean the atmosphere because when precipitation occurs such as rain it brings the stuff that is in it's way to down to the surface.
a cumulus cloud form some of the biggest cloud stuctures. they are flat on the bottom but rise in big puffy mounds, rather like icecream. you often see these clouds as they roll in from the sea. they cary for a large capacity of rain.