Clouds are usually classified based on their heights, appearance and color.
Form and height
cirrus clouds are clouds that form above 18,000 feet in the air.
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This classification scheme does not exist for good reason.
Clouds don't melt in the same way that solid substances like ice do. Clouds are made up of tiny water droplets or ice crystals suspended in the air. When the conditions change, such as temperature or humidity, these droplets may evaporate or combine to form larger droplets, eventually falling as precipitation. So, while clouds don't melt, they undergo processes like condensation and evaporation based on atmospheric conditions.
Clouds are usually classified based on their heights, appearance and color.
Form and height
Luke Howard, born in 1772 in London, came up with the names for clouds based on a classification system he developed.
Clouds are classified on the basis of their form and height.
The lowest clouds are called fog. The classification of low clouds is stratiform.
See the link below for details about clouds classification.
See the link below for details about clouds classification.
cirrus clouds are clouds that form above 18,000 feet in the air.
The cirrus clouds, cirrocumulus clouds, cirrostratus clouds, and cumulonimbus clouds.
The cirrus clouds, cirrocumulus clouds, cirrostratus clouds, and cumulonimbus clouds.
The cirrus clouds, cirrocumulus clouds, cirrostratus clouds, and cumulonimbus clouds.
The classification system is based on programming language used: primarily Python and Java.