The clouds usually are fairly restricted in height, but can sometimes extend upwards to much higher altitudes when they become known as cumulonimbus clouds. These are very large and can extend to 12000 metres or higher. At base level, the cloud is made up of water droplets but the top of the cloud is made up of ice crystals. Cumulonimbus produce severe weather such as heavy rain, hail, thunderstorms and tornadoes.
Cumulonimbus clouds have a violet and erratic updraughts of air. Water which condenses out to fall as rain , can also be raised higher in the atmosphere by these updraughts, to a point where the water freezes in to hail. Because of the erratic nature of draughts in these clouds , both rain and hail can fall from the cloud.
Cumulonimbus clouds, those can cause supercell storms (rotating thunderstorms) and then severe weather, such as deadly lightning, tornadoes, large hail, straight line winds, and even flooding.Another cloud is Mammatus. Mammatus hangs beneath the anvil of a mature thunder cloud. It produces severe weather especially tornadoes. I read this from a book so this is true.
its just the way the water evaporated
Precipitation from a cumulonimbus cloud bank will be severe. Thunderstorms, hail, tornado's are all predicated by this tall column of clouds.rain and hailDon't forget the effect of seasons! Snow and sleet (rain and snow mixed) showers can fall from this cloud and it can also cause patchy "rain ice" on surfaces whose temperature is below zero degrees Celsius.
yes if it is a cumulonimbus cloud!
Cumulonimbus clouds have a violet and erratic updraughts of air. Water which condenses out to fall as rain , can also be raised higher in the atmosphere by these updraughts, to a point where the water freezes in to hail. Because of the erratic nature of draughts in these clouds , both rain and hail can fall from the cloud.
Depending on the temperature and other conditions, it could be rain, snow or hail. But if the question is about what falls from cumulonimbus that most likely wouldn't fall from other cloud formations, then the answer would be hail. It's the vertical activity that gives the cumulonimbus cloud its distinctive shape, and it's the vertical activity that forms hail...especially large hail stones.
Generally, it's the rain that it produces. However, if during this process the temperature drops to very low, they freeze and fall down as Hails.
no
Cumulonimbus clouds, those can cause supercell storms (rotating thunderstorms) and then severe weather, such as deadly lightning, tornadoes, large hail, straight line winds, and even flooding.Another cloud is Mammatus. Mammatus hangs beneath the anvil of a mature thunder cloud. It produces severe weather especially tornadoes. I read this from a book so this is true.
A cumulonimbus cloud produces rain.
The type of cloud produces heavy rain lightning thunder hail and strong wind is called cumulonimbus.
its just the way the water evaporated
the big rain cloud is the cloud that makes big rain.
comulonimbus clouds are associated with any type of thunderstorms and severe weather including heavy rain
The clouds usually are fairly restricted in height, but can sometimes extend upwards to much higher altitudes when they become known as cumulonimbus clouds. These are very large and can extend to 12000 metres or higher. At base level, the cloud is made up of water droplets but the top of the cloud is made up of ice crystals. Cumulonimbus produce severe weather such as heavy rain, hail, thunderstorms and tornadoes.
A cumulonimbus cloud produces rain.