clouds
becase it is so high
troposphere:- The troposphere contains particles of dust which serve as nuclear centers for the formation of clouds. There is decrease of temperature with a mean rate of about 6.40C per km. it is from 0 to 15 kilometers. it has more air and has many clouds. Stratosphere No visible weather phenomena take place in this layer In this layer the temperature does not change with altitude.er stratosphere it is from 15 km to 50 km. there is very little air and jet aeroplanes fly in this layer.
Those are altocumulus clouds, which are mid-level clouds that often appear dense and fluffy, resembling a field of floating cotton balls. They typically indicate unsettled weather or the possibility of a storm approaching.
The troposphere is the layer of the atmosphere that creates weather. It is where most of Earth's weather occurs due to the mixing of air masses with different temperatures and humidities, leading to the formation of clouds, precipitation, and other weather phenomena.
Moisture is rare in the stratosphere, so few clouds reach this location. Nacreous and non-nacreous clouds are the only category of clouds found in the stratosphere, and the non-nacreous ones contain nitric acid.
The amount of water vapor in the stratosphere is much lower than in the lower atmosphere. The condensation of water vapor is what creates clouds (and rain, hail, snow, and other forms of precipitation) Also because weather occurs in the troposphere, and clouds are formed from water vapor, which is part of the water cycle, which is part of weather
The stratosphere is a layer of the Earth's atmosphere where temperatures increase with altitude. Weather phenomena like clouds, precipitation, and storms are not commonly found in the stratosphere, as it is a stable and relatively dry layer.
One reason is because there is very little water vapor. The other is because air in the stratosphere is stable. This means that there is no inherent tendency for it to rise, since temperature increases with altitude.
i think stratosphere
Stratosphere
clouds
Weather primarily occurs in the troposphere, which is the lowest layer of the atmosphere and is where most of Earth's weather phenomena, such as clouds, storms, and wind, take place. The stratosphere, above the troposphere, contains the ozone layer that absorbs the sun's ultraviolet radiation. Outer space is beyond Earth's atmosphere and does not have weather as we understand it.
The stratosphere is almost completely free from clouds. Clouds are present in the troposphere, the layer closest to the earth.
Yes, 99% of weather occurs in the troposphere because the tropopause, the temperature boundary between the troposphere and stratosphere, disallows formation of clouds and weather due to the separation of low temperatures in the troposphere and higher temperatures in the stratosphere. This boundary is only rarely breached.
We live in the troposphere. The troposphere is under the stratosphere.
Nimbus clouds, typically associated with rain and storms, are not fair weather clouds. Fair weather clouds, like cumulus clouds, are generally seen during stable weather conditions and do not usually bring precipitation.