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Stratiform clouds are layered clouds and they have very horizontal extent. Cumuliform clouds tops look like a popcorn, cotton ball or like cauliflower.

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What cloud type is associated with warm fronts?

Stratus clouds are typically associated with warm fronts. These clouds form a thick, uniform layer that can produce light to moderate precipitation over a large area as warm air slowly lifts over cooler air at the frontal boundary.


Is a water spout a whirlpool?

No. A waterspout is an intense columnar vortex (usually appearing as a funnel-shaped cloud) that occurs over a body of water and is connected to a cumuliform cloud. It is a essentially a non-supercell tornado over water. In comparison, a whirlpool is a votex that occurs inside a body of water, forming a depression which sucks objects deeper into the water.


What is the altitude range of a stratus clouds?

Cloud levelsClouds are generally categorized in three groups: Stratus (lower clouds), Alto (mid-level clouds), and Cirrus (high-level clouds). Alto clouds are found between approximately 2000M to 7000M. The "stratus" in the word altostratus refers to the form of the clouds, in this case, they are stratified, or flat, as opposed to cumuliform clouds which are vertical in structure.


What are characteristics of a moist unstable air mass?

A moist unstable air mass is typically warm and holds a high amount of moisture. It is associated with conditions that are favorable for thunderstorm development, due to its ability to rise quickly and form clouds with significant vertical development. This air mass is often characterized by convective activity and the potential for severe weather events, such as thunderstorms, heavy rainfall, and sometimes tornadoes.


What type of front is approaching if you see cirrus clouds high in the sky EXPLAIN how you know?

A warm front is likely approaching if you see cirrus clouds high in the sky. These clouds are indicators of an advancing warm front because they form at high altitudes where warm air is being lifted over the cooler air present ahead of the front. This lifting of warm air can produce cirrus clouds, which are composed of ice crystals and are often thin and wispy in appearance.

Related Questions

Clouds of cold fronts are usually cumuliform?

Cumuliform clouds typically form along or ahead of a cold front. Most cloudiness and precipitation associated with a cold front occur as a relatively narrow band along or just ahead of where the front intersects Earth's surface.


What is a tornado definicion?

According to the glossary of meteorology a tornado is defined as "a violently rotating column of air, pendant from a cumuliform cloud or underneath a cumuliform cloud, and often (but not always) visible as a funnel cloud." In meteorological terms the vortex described above must connect to both the ground and the cloud base to be considered a tornado.


Describe the difference between cumuliform clouds and stratiform clouds?

Cumuliform clouds are puffy and vertically-developed, forming from rising air currents; they indicate unstable atmospheric conditions and can lead to thunderstorms. Stratiform clouds are flat and layered, forming in stable atmospheric conditions from broad areas of lifting air; they typically bring steady, prolonged precipitation.


What cloud type is associated with warm fronts?

Stratus clouds are typically associated with warm fronts. These clouds form a thick, uniform layer that can produce light to moderate precipitation over a large area as warm air slowly lifts over cooler air at the frontal boundary.


What are some words related to weather that start with the letter A?

· ablation (the process of being removed - snow ablation refers to snow removal by melting) · acid rain (rain including pollutants) · advisory · air mass · air pollution · air pressure · airstream · altitude · altocumulus (mid-altitude clouds with a cumuliform shape) · anemometer (instrument that measures wind speed) · arctic air · atmosphere · avalanche


What is the scientific definition of a tornado?

A tornado is a rapidly rotating column of air that extends from a thunderstorm to the ground. It is often visible in the form of a funnel-shaped cloud and is capable of causing significant damage due to its strong winds. Tornadoes are classified based on the Enhanced Fujita (EF) scale, which ranks them from EF0 to EF5 based on the damage they produce.


What is the English of ipo-ipo or buhawi?

I believe ipo-ipo or buhawi (as locally known) are also known as waterspouts. Please refer to the story in this link: http://tubagbohol.mikeligalig.com/index.php?topic=16991.0 What exactly is a waterspout? A waterspout is an intense columnar vortex (usually appearing as a funnel-shaped cloud) that occurs over a body of water and is connected to a cumuliform cloud. In the common form, it is a nonsupercell tornado over water, and brings the water upward. It is weaker than most of its land counterparts.[1] (Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waterspouts) I hope this helped! :)


Is a water spout a whirlpool?

No. A waterspout is an intense columnar vortex (usually appearing as a funnel-shaped cloud) that occurs over a body of water and is connected to a cumuliform cloud. It is a essentially a non-supercell tornado over water. In comparison, a whirlpool is a votex that occurs inside a body of water, forming a depression which sucks objects deeper into the water.


What is the definition for the word tornado?

According to the American Meteorological Society a tornado is defined thusly:tornado-1. A violently rotating column of air, in contact with the ground, either pendant from a cumuliform cloud or underneath a cumuliform cloud, and often (but not always) visible as a funnel cloud. When tornadoes do occur without any visible funnel cloud, debris at the surface is usually the indication of the existence of an intense circulation in contact with the ground. On a local scale, the tornado is the most intense of all atmospheric circulations. Its vortex, typically a few hundred meters in diameter, usually rotates cyclonically (on rare occasions anticyclonically rotating tornadoes have been observed) with wind speeds as low as 18 m s−1 (40 mph) to wind speeds as high as 135 m s−1 (300 mph). Wind speeds are sometimes estimated on the basis of wind damage using the Fujita scale. Some tornadoes may also contain secondary vortices (suction vortices). Tornadoes occur on all continents but are most common in the United States, where the average number of reported tornadoes is roughly 1000 per year, with the majority of them on the central plains and in the southeastern states (see Tornado Alley). They can occur throughout the year at any time of day. In the central plains of the United States they are most frequent in spring during the late afternoon. See also supercell tornado, nonsupercell tornado, gustnado, landspout, waterspout. 2. A violent thundersquall in West Africa and adjacent Atlantic waters. http://amsglossary.allenpress.com/glossary/search?id=tornado1


What is the altitude range of a stratus clouds?

Cloud levelsClouds are generally categorized in three groups: Stratus (lower clouds), Alto (mid-level clouds), and Cirrus (high-level clouds). Alto clouds are found between approximately 2000M to 7000M. The "stratus" in the word altostratus refers to the form of the clouds, in this case, they are stratified, or flat, as opposed to cumuliform clouds which are vertical in structure.


Where can tornados occur?

Anywhere in the world...but only under certain circumstances. Tornadoes can occur anywhere in the world and at anytime with given favorable conditions, except in Antarctica. True Tornadoes do not occur here. Tornadoes can and usually originate from supercell thunderstorms that contain a mesocyclone. A mesocyclone is a horizontal whirling air mass within the cumulonimbus(Cb) cloud. The warm air updraft can push the mesocyclone to a vertical position. The storm relative helicity has an important role in the tornadoes development and strength. The rear flank down draft helps to push the mesocyclone down and soon what appears at the base of the cumuliform cloud (which is most likely a rotating wall cloud) is a funnel cloud forming. The funnel cloud is NOT a tornado until it makes contact with the earth. Several things may be taking place as the funnel is slowly descending (not all funnels descend slowly, some do some don't. Some have difficulty in forming and pull back into the cloud). The sky may change color, it can be black or a greenish color, usually signs that a tornado is in its forming stages, but is not always a guarantee. There will be hail, usually quite heavy. A rain-free base of the cumuliform cloud. This is usually the area where the tornado is located. There can be lightning, but some tornadoes have no lightning or very little. Keeping a watch on the sky, when things don't look good, find out if any severe weather watches have been posted and if they have, follow directions. Even with Doppler radar, a tornado can descend before the tornado vortex signature is seen on radar and that indicates that a mesocyclone has been spotted in a supercell and it is favorable for tornadic development. With Doppler radar, meteorologists say there is about a 7-9 minute window before the tornado comes. You cant depend on that. When the watch is posted, you much take shelter immediately.


What are characteristics of a moist unstable air mass?

A moist unstable air mass is typically warm and holds a high amount of moisture. It is associated with conditions that are favorable for thunderstorm development, due to its ability to rise quickly and form clouds with significant vertical development. This air mass is often characterized by convective activity and the potential for severe weather events, such as thunderstorms, heavy rainfall, and sometimes tornadoes.