The stratosphere is almost completely free from clouds. Clouds are present in the troposphere, the layer closest to the earth.
Jupiter's atmosphere is divided into four main cloud layers: ammonia clouds, ammonium hydrosulfide clouds, water clouds, and ice clouds. These layers exist at different altitudes within the planet's atmosphere.
Atmosphere.
Not really. Pluto's atmosphere has a few layers of haze but not full-fledged clouds.
Jupiter is the planet known for having an atmosphere made of three layers of dense hydrogen clouds. The clouds are composed of ammonia crystals, ammonium hydrosulfide, and water vapor.
No. Pluto has some layers of haze in its atmosphere, but no actual clouds.
The different layers of clouds in the Earth's atmosphere are classified into three main types: high clouds, middle clouds, and low clouds. High clouds are found at altitudes of 20,000 to 40,000 feet and include cirrus, cirrostratus, and cirrocumulus clouds. Middle clouds are located between 6,500 to 20,000 feet and consist of altocumulus and altostratus clouds. Low clouds are found below 6,500 feet and include stratus, stratocumulus, and nimbostratus clouds.
The troposphere, which is the atmosphere that we live in. It is also where clouds form, precipitation occurs, and where weather occurs.
Jupiter is the planet with three layers of dense hydrogen clouds in its atmosphere. These layers are known as the upper, middle, and lower cloud decks, with each containing different types of clouds made up of ammonia, ammonium hydrosulfide, and water crystals.
Cirrostratus clouds can extend through all layers of the atmosphere, from the high-level cirrostratus clouds at altitudes of 6,500 to 16,500 feet to the lower-level stratus clouds near the Earth's surface. These clouds often cover large regions with a thin veil of ice crystals or water droplets.
Altocumulus clouds are grayish layers of clouds found at an altitude ranging from 5000 to 20000 feet in the atmosphere. They typically appear as patches or layers and are composed of water droplets. Altocumulus clouds do not usually produce precipitation, but they can sometimes indicate approaching weather changes.
Almost all clouds, including the cumulonimbus, are contained in the troposphere although some clouds occasionally protrude upward into the next level.
Clouds are composed of water droplets or ice crystals suspended in the Earth's atmosphere. They form in different atmospheric layers depending on their altitude, with low-level clouds found below 6,500 feet, mid-level clouds between 6,500 and 23,000 feet, and high-level clouds above 23,000 feet.