The cloud cover helps to keep the heat from the day in, much like an insulating blanket.
yes
Clouds are formed during warm front when it condenses....
well... during the day the sun heats up the earth. and when night falls and its cloudy the clouds act like a blanket and keep the heat in better than if it was not cloudy at night. (Just wanted to tell that i didn't think of this someone else did.)
Cumulus and cumulonimbus clouds typically form where warm air rises rapidly. The warm air cools as it ascends, causing water vapor to condense and form clouds. Cumulus clouds are puffy and often indicate fair weather, while cumulonimbus clouds are larger and can bring thunderstorms.
Along a warm front, you typically see stratiform clouds such as nimbostratus, which bring prolonged periods of precipitation. As the warm air ascends over the denser cool air, it cools and condenses to form these clouds. In some cases, altocumulus and cirrostratus clouds may also be present ahead of the warm front.
yes
Yes, yet ONLY when It is full of Clouds. A night-time Sky without any Clouds bodes for a quite cold surface temperature; the same sky full of Clouds, well you do not even need your furnace.
Clouds are formed during warm front when it condenses....
well... during the day the sun heats up the earth. and when night falls and its cloudy the clouds act like a blanket and keep the heat in better than if it was not cloudy at night. (Just wanted to tell that i didn't think of this someone else did.)
Cumulus clouds is an resault of updraft of warm,moist air in tall clouds.
Yes, cumulonimbus clouds are often associated with warm fronts. As warm air rises over a colder air mass along a warm front, it can lead to the development of cumulonimbus clouds and potentially thunderstorms.
Since clouds are cool moist air, and cold air is heavier than warm air, the cloud cover holds down the warmth that accumulates during the day and keeps the ambient temperature slightly higher over night.
Yes. Warm fronts typically bring clouds and light rain or snow.
The bases of convective clouds are generally higher during the day due to heating from the sun causing warm air near the surface to rise. At night, without the heating effect of the sun, the bases of convective clouds tend to be lower as the atmosphere cools and stabilizes.
clouds fly higher in the night
The system of clouds that form ahead of a warm front are mostly cirrus, cirrostratus, altostratus, and nimbostratus clouds. These types of clouds typically bring overcast skies, steady precipitation, and a gradual increase in temperature as the warm front approaches.
Cumulus and cumulonimbus clouds typically form where warm air rises rapidly. The warm air cools as it ascends, causing water vapor to condense and form clouds. Cumulus clouds are puffy and often indicate fair weather, while cumulonimbus clouds are larger and can bring thunderstorms.