The term that describes layered and round formations of ice that form in cumulonimbus clouds is "hail." Hailstones develop through a process of updrafts and downdrafts within the cloud, allowing water droplets to freeze in layers as they are repeatedly lifted and dropped. This results in the characteristic round shape and layered structure of hail.
Hail A+
Cumulus clouds- heaping billows-show fair weather. stratus clouds-low floating layer-altostratus. cirrus-curling like a lock of hair-cirrus. Nimbus-(or cumulonimbus) are rain clouds.
Clouds are formations of water vapor in the Earth's atmosphere. They are named based on their appearance and altitude, with common types including cirrus, cumulus, and stratus clouds.
Cumulonimbus clouds are also called thunderheads.
Yes, cumulus clouds can develop into cumulonimbus clouds through a process called cloud growth. Cumulonimbus clouds are larger and taller versions of cumulus clouds that can bring thunderstorms and severe weather.
Hail A+
That would be hail. Hail forms when updrafts in a cumulonimbus cloud carry raindrops into extremely cold areas of the atmosphere, causing them to freeze into layered lumps or balls of ice.
Cumulonimbus. big billowing clouds that look like mushrooms.
Cumulonimbus clouds are storm clouds.
the clouds are cumulonimbus clouds
Cumulus clouds- heaping billows-show fair weather. stratus clouds-low floating layer-altostratus. cirrus-curling like a lock of hair-cirrus. Nimbus-(or cumulonimbus) are rain clouds.
Cumulonimbus clouds bring thunderstorms.
Cumulonimbus are the clouds of thunderstorms.
cumulonimbus clouds
Clouds are formations of water vapor in the Earth's atmosphere. They are named based on their appearance and altitude, with common types including cirrus, cumulus, and stratus clouds.
Cumulonimbus clouds are also called thunderheads.
The thin, wispy clouds you saw are Cirrus clouds and they are very high in the atmosphere and made of ice crystals. They normally indicate a change in the weather, and it is usually bad weather. This means that the low layered cloud you saw was either a stratus or cumulonimbus cloud which are both storm clouds. Cirrus clouds don't always predict storms, but that was probably what was happening.