Rain, thunderstorms
A cumulonimbus cloud can produce heavy rainfall, lightning, thunder, and sometimes hail. They are associated with severe weather events such as thunderstorms, tornadoes, and heavy downpours.
Cumulonimbus clouds are typically associated with severe weather events like thunderstorms and can produce heavy precipitation, but they are not usually present in blizzards. Blizzards are characterized by prolonged snow and strong winds, primarily formed from stratiform clouds, such as nimbostratus. While cumulonimbus clouds may occur in other winter weather events, they do not play a significant role in the development of blizzards.
Cumulus clouds cause fair weather, but cumulonimbus on the other hand don't, they cause thunderstorms and severe weather. Cumulus clouds can occur on fair weather days because of areas of rising and sinking air from the surface. This is typical of a conditionally stable atmosphere. Cumulonimbus clouds are the result of frontal lifting, allowing air rising to tap into atmospheric energy and therefore allowing the air to rise on its own without further frontal lifting required.
Weather that occurs on Jupiter is basically the same as the weather on Earth
Thunderstorms form from cumulonimbus clouds, but they don't have to be low. Some of these thunderstorms can produce tornadoes, but not all. A thunderstorm is the only thing that can produce a tornado. Tornadoes form best from low-based thunderstorms.
cumulonimbus clouds.
No, cumulonimbus and cumulus clouds are not the same. Cumulus clouds are fluffy and usually indicate fair weather, while cumulonimbus clouds are larger and can develop into thunderstorms, bringing heavy rain, lightning, and strong winds.
A cumulonimbus cloud would usually appear on a hot, humid summer day. As these clouds build up, you then get a thunderstorm.
No. Cumulonimbus clouds are thunderheads. Cumulus clouds usually indicate fair weather.
Cumulonimbus are the clouds of thunderstorms.
A cumulus cloud is a fluffy, white cloud that usually indicates fair weather, while a cumulonimbus cloud is a larger, towering cloud that can bring thunderstorms and severe weather.
Cumulonimbus clouds indicate the possibility of severe weather, such as thunderstorms, heavy rain, hail, and strong winds.
No. Cumulus clouds are the fairly small, puffy white clouds that usually come with nice weather. Cumulonimbus clouds are enormous towering clouds often called thunderheads as it is these clouds that become thunderstorms.
A cumulonimbus cloud usually indicates severe weather conditions, such as thunderstorms, heavy rain, lightning, hail, and sometimes tornadoes. These clouds are tall, dense, and vertically developing, making them one of the most dramatic types of clouds in the sky.
Thunderstorms
It is a thunderstorm.
Stormy! Cumulonimbus clouds are associated with extreme weather such as heavy torrential downpours, hail storms, lightning and tornados