For other uses, see Cloud (disambiguation).
Cumulus of fair weather

A cloud is a visible mass of condensation droplets or ice crystals suspended in the atmosphere above the surface of the Earth or another planetary body.

On Earth, the condensing substance is water vapor, which forms small droplets of water (typically 0.01 mm or ice crystals that, when surrounded with billions of other droplets or crystals, are visible as clouds. Clouds reflect all visible wavelengths of light equally and are usually white, but they can appear grey or even black if they are so thick or dense that sunlight cannot pass through.

Contents

  • 1 Cloud formation and properties
  • 2 Cloud Classification
    • 2.1 High clouds (Family A)
    • 2.2 Middle clouds (Family B)
    • 2.3 Low clouds (Family C)
    • 2.4 Vertical clouds (Family D)
    • 2.5 Other clouds
  • 3 Colors of clouds
  • 4 Global dimming
  • 5 Clouds on other planets
  • 6 See also
  • 7 External links

Cloud formation and properties

A variety of cloud formations.
Global scheme of cloud optical thickness.

Clouds form when the invisible water vapour in the air condenses into visible water droplets or ice crystals. This can happen in two ways.

1. The air is cooled to its saturation point. This happens when the air comes in contact with a cold surface or a surface that is cooling by radiation, or the air is cooled by adiabatic expansion (rising). This can happen

  • along warm and cold fronts (Frontal lift),
  • where air flows up the side of a mountain and cools as it rises higher into the atmosphere (orographic lift),
  • by the convection caused by the warming of a surface by insolation (diurnal heating),
  • when warm air blows over a colder surface such as a cool body of water.

2. The air stays the same temperature but absorbs more water vapour into it until it reaches saturation.

Clouds are quite heavy. The water in a typical cloud can have a mass of up to several million tonnes. However, the volume of a cloud is correspondingly high, and the net density of water vapor is actually low enough that air currents below and within the cloud are capable of keeping small droplets suspended. As well, conditions inside a cloud are not static: water droplets are constantly forming and re-evaporating. A typical cloud droplet has a radius on the order of 1 x 10-5 m and a terminal velocity of about 1-2 cm/s. This give these droplets plenty of time to re-evaporate as they fall into in the warmer air beneath the cloud.

Most water droplets are formed when water vapor condenses around a condensation nucleus, a tiny particle of smoke, dust, ash, or salt. In supersaturated conditions, water droplets may act as condensation nuclei.

Water droplets large enough to fall to the ground are produced in two ways. The most important is through the Bergeron Process, theorized by Tor Bergeron, in which supercooled water droplets and ice crystals in a cloud interact to produce the rapid growth of ice crystals, which precipitate from the cloud and melt as they fall. This process typically takes place in clouds with tops cooler than -15°C. The second most important process is the collision and wake capture process, occurring in clouds with warmer tops, in which the collision of rising and falling water droplets produces larger and larger droplets, which are evenually heavy enough to overcome air currents in the cloud and the updraft beneath it and fall as rain. As a droplet falls through the smaller droplets which surround it, it produces a "wake" which draws some of the smaller droplets into collisions, thus perpetuating the process. This method of raindrop production is the primary mechanism in low stratiform clouds and small cumulus clouds in tropical regions. It typically produces smaller raindrops and drizzle.

The actual form of cloud created depends on the strength of the uplift and on air stability. In unstable conditions convection dominates, creating vertically developed clouds. Stable air produces horizontally homogeneous clouds. Frontal uplift creates various cloud forms depending on the composition of the front (ana-type or kata-type warm or cold front). Orographic uplift also creates variable cloud forms depending on air stability, although cap cloud and wave clouds are specific to orographic clouds.

Cloud Classification

Cloud Classification by altitude of occurrence

Clouds are divided into two general categories: layered and convective. These are named stratus clouds (or stratiform, the Latin stratus means layer) and cumulus clouds (or cumiloform, cumulus means piled up). These two cloud types are divided into four more groups that distinguish the cloud's altitude. Clouds are classified by the cloud base height, not the cloud top. This system was proposed by Luke Howard in 1802 in a presentation to the Askesian Society.

High clouds (Family A)

These generally form above 16,500 feet (5,000 m), in the cold region of the troposphere. However, in Polar regions they may form as low as 10,000 ft (3,048 m). They are denoted by the prefix cirro- or cirrus. At this altitude water almost always freezes so clouds are composed of ice crystals. The clouds tend to be wispy, and are often transparent.

Clouds in Family A include:

  • Cirrus
  • Cirrus uncinus
  • Cirrus Kelvin-Helmholtz
  • Cirrostratus
  • Cirrocumulus
  • Pileus
  • Contrail


A contrail is a long thin cloud which develops as the result of the passage of a jet airplane at high altitudes.

Middle clouds (Family B)

Altocumulus mackerel sky

These develop between 6,500 and 16,500 feet (between 2,000 and 5,000 m) and are denoted by the prefix alto-. They are made of water droplets, and are frequently supercooled.

Clouds in Family B include:

  • Altostratus
  • Altostratus undulatus
  • Altocumulus
  • Altocumulus undulatus
  • Altocumulus mackerel sky
  • Altocumulus castellanus
  • Altocumulus lenticularis

Low clouds (Family C)

some low clouds

These are found up to 6,500 feet (2,000 m) and include the stratus (dense and grey). When stratus clouds contact the ground they are called fog.

Clouds in Family C include:

  • Stratus
  • Nimbostratus
  • Cumulus humilis
  • Cumulus mediocris
  • Stratocumulus

Vertical clouds (Family D)

Cumulonimbus clouds showing strong updrafts.

These clouds can have strong upcurrents, rise far above their bases and can form at many heights.

Clouds in Family D include:

  • Cumulonimbus (associated with heavy precipitation and thunderstorms)
  • Cumulonimbus incus
  • Cumulonimbus calvus
  • Cumulonimbus with mammatus
  • Cumulus congestus
  • Pyrocumulus

Other clouds

A few clouds can be found above the troposphere; these include nacreous, noctilucent and polar stratospheric clouds which occur in the stratosphere and mesosphere respectively.

Colors of clouds

An example of various cloud colors.

Cloud color tells much about what is going on inside a cloud.

Clouds form when water vapor rises, cools, and condenses out of the air as microdroplets. These tiny particles of water are relatively dense, and sunlight cannot penetrate far into the cloud before it is reflected out, giving a cloud its characteristic white color. As a cloud matures, the droplets may combine to produce larger droplets, which may themselves combine to form droplets large enough to fall as rain. In this process of accumulation, the space between droplets becomes larger and larger, permitting light to penetrate much farther into the cloud. If the cloud is sufficiently large, and the droplets within are spaced far enough apart, it may be that very little light which enters the cloud is able to be reflected back out before it is absorbed. (Think of how much farther one can see in a heavy rain as opposed to how far one can see in a heavy fog.) This process of reflection/absorption is what leads to the range of cloud color from white through grey through black. For the same reason, the undersides of large clouds and heavy overcasts appear various degrees of grey; little light is being reflected or transmitted back to the observer.

Other colours occur naturally in clouds. Bluish-grey is the result of light scattering within the cloud. In the visible spectrum, blue and green are at the short end of light's visible wavelengths, while red and yellow are at the long end. The short rays are more easily scattered by water droplets, and the long rays are more likely to be absorbed. The bluish color is evidence that such scattering is being produced by rain-sized droplets in the cloud.

A more ominous colour is the one seen frequently by severe weather observers. A greenish tinge to a cloud is produced when sunlight is scattered by ice. A cumulonimbus cloud which shows green is a pretty sure sign of imminent heavy rain, hail, strong winds, and possibly tornados.

Yellowish clouds are rare, but may occur in the late spring through early fall months during forest fire season. The yellow color is due to the presence of smoke.

Red, orange, and pink clouds occur almost entirely at sunrise/sunset, and are the result of the scattering of sunlight by the atmosphere itself. The clouds themselves are not that color, they are merely reflecting the long (and unscattered) rays of sunlight which are predominant at those hours. The effect is much the same as if one were to shine a red spotlight on a white sheet. In combination with large, mature thunderheads, this can produce blood-red clouds. The evening before the Edmonton, Alberta tornado in 1987, Edmontonians observed such clouds - deep black on their dark side, and intense red on their sunward side. In this case, the adage "red sky at night, sailor's delight" was clearly incorrect.

Global dimming

The recently recognized phenomena of global dimming is thought to be caused by changes to the reflectivity of clouds due to the increased presence of aerosols and other particulates in the atmosphere.

Clouds on other planets

Within our solar system, any planet with an atmosphere also has clouds. Venus' clouds are composed entirely of sulfuric acid droplets. Mars has high, thin clouds of water ice. Both Jupiter and Saturn have an outer cloud deck composed of ammonia clouds, an intermediate deck of ammonium hydrosulfide clouds, and an inner deck of water clouds. Uranus and Neptune have atmospheres dominated by methane clouds.

See also

Threatening low clouds
  • Nephology
  • Cloud albedo
  • Cloud feedback
  • Cloud base
  • Cloud forcing
  • Cloud types
  • Fog
  • Precipitation
  • Coalescence
  • Tornado
  • Hurricane
  • Monsoon
  • Thunderstorm
  • Weather lore
  • Mammatus
  • Extraterrestrial skies

External links

Find more information on Cloud by searching one of Wikipedia's sister projects:

  • Australia Severe Weather: cloud classification system Lots of photos. Click on the thumbnail to get a bigger image.
  • Chitambo Clouds – Clouds and other meteorological phenomena - photographs and information on different types of cloudsca:Núvol

cs:Oblak da:Sky (meteorologi) de:Wolke es:Nube eo:Nubo fr:Nuage gl:Nube is:Ský it:Nube he:ענן lt:Debesis mk:Облак nl:Wolk ja:雲 no:Sky pl:Chmura pt:Nuvem simple:Cloud sv:Moln th:เมฆ vi:Mây tr:Bulut zh:云

"Cloud"

 

Related News



Top Related Terms

1. red cloud
2. cloud
3. st cloud times
4. cloud strife
5. type of cloud
6. st cloud state university
7. cloud picture
8. cloud 9
9. cloud nine
10. dark cloud
11. st cloud state
12. st cloud
13. st cloud mn
14. dark cloud 2
15. storm cloud
16. christmas in the cloud
17. st cloud technical college
18. stratus cloud
19. head in the cloud
20. photo of angel in the cloud
21. st cloud hospital
22. cumulus cloud
23. cirrus cloud
24. red cloud password
25. cloud gas neptune
26. mushroom cloud
27. tifa and cloud
28. st cloud minnesota
29. cloud formation
30. cloud song
31. mighty cloud of joy
32. voyeur web red cloud
33. cloud county community college
34. oort cloud
35. dark cloud 2 walk through
36. silver cloud
37. silver cloud inn
38. cloud background
39. black cloud
40. cloud cover
41. dark cloud walk through
42. the cloud room
43. painting cloud
44. a walk in the cloud
45. cloud 9 shuttle
46. red cloud igor
47. red cloud explicit
48. electron cloud
49. saint cloud state university
50. cloud seeding
51. cloud wallpaper
52. white cloud
53. dark cloud cheat
54. cloud forest
55. st cloud university
56. rain cloud
57. electron cloud model
58. above the cloud
59. different type of cloud
60. jhudoras cloud
61. sky cloud
62. cartoon cloud
63. cumulonimbus cloud
64. saint cloud
65. castle on a cloud
66. saint cloud times
67. restaurant st cloud
68. i wandered lonely as a cloud
69. final fantasy 7 cloud
70. white cloud diaper
71. cloud form
72. dark cloud 2 cheat
73. cloud photo
74. sun cloud
75. funnel cloud
76. nimbus cloud
77. cloud nine shuttle
78. dark cloud 3
79. saint cloud minnesota
80. ff7 cloud
81. wind and cloud
82. castle in the cloud
83. red cloud voyeur
84. daniel cloud campos
85. cloud angels
86. cloud b
87. st cloud florida
88. st cloud daily times
89. st cloud high school
90. zack cloud