lecture 9 (11/04) metr 1111 cloud types. cloud classification in 1803, luke howard devised the basic...

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Lecture 9 (11/04) METR 1111 Cloud Types

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Page 1: Lecture 9 (11/04) METR 1111 Cloud Types. Cloud Classification In 1803, Luke Howard devised the basic system of cloud classification Still used today Based

Lecture 9 (11/04)METR 1111

Cloud Types

Page 2: Lecture 9 (11/04) METR 1111 Cloud Types. Cloud Classification In 1803, Luke Howard devised the basic system of cloud classification Still used today Based

Cloud Classification

• In 1803, Luke Howard devised the basic system of cloud classification

• Still used today

• Based on Latin names

• Two parts to a cloud’s name:

- Shape (ex: cirrus, stratus, cumulus)

- Height (cloud base & vertical extent)

Page 3: Lecture 9 (11/04) METR 1111 Cloud Types. Cloud Classification In 1803, Luke Howard devised the basic system of cloud classification Still used today Based

Shapes & Heights

• Shapes

- Cirrus = curly and wispy

- Stratus = layered or stratified

- Cumulus = lumpy or piled up• Heights

- Cirro = high (bases above 20,000 ft)

- Alto = mid level (bases 7,000-20,000 ft)

- Nimbo = producing precipitation

Page 4: Lecture 9 (11/04) METR 1111 Cloud Types. Cloud Classification In 1803, Luke Howard devised the basic system of cloud classification Still used today Based

What do clouds tell us?

• Clouds just don’t happen - there’s always a reason

• A particular cloud’s shape and location depend on (and can therefore tell us about):

- the movement of the air

- amount of water vapor in air

- stability (flat clouds = stable air while puffy clouds = unstable air)

Page 5: Lecture 9 (11/04) METR 1111 Cloud Types. Cloud Classification In 1803, Luke Howard devised the basic system of cloud classification Still used today Based

Cirrus Clouds

• Cirrus = high altitude wispy clouds

• Quite thin and often have a hairlike or filament type of appearance.

• Made up of ice particles

• The curled up ends (called mares’ tales) as depicted in the following picture are very common features.

Page 6: Lecture 9 (11/04) METR 1111 Cloud Types. Cloud Classification In 1803, Luke Howard devised the basic system of cloud classification Still used today Based

Cirrus Photo

Page 7: Lecture 9 (11/04) METR 1111 Cloud Types. Cloud Classification In 1803, Luke Howard devised the basic system of cloud classification Still used today Based

Stratus Clouds

• Stratus clouds are usually the lowest of the low clouds.

• Often appear as an overcast deck (as shown in next slide), but can be scattered.

• The individual cloud elements have very ill-defined edges compared to cumulus

• Fog is just stratus clouds on the surface

Page 8: Lecture 9 (11/04) METR 1111 Cloud Types. Cloud Classification In 1803, Luke Howard devised the basic system of cloud classification Still used today Based

Stratus Photo

Page 9: Lecture 9 (11/04) METR 1111 Cloud Types. Cloud Classification In 1803, Luke Howard devised the basic system of cloud classification Still used today Based

Fog (Stratus on Ground) Photo

Page 10: Lecture 9 (11/04) METR 1111 Cloud Types. Cloud Classification In 1803, Luke Howard devised the basic system of cloud classification Still used today Based

Cumulus Clouds

• Cumulus clouds are puffy (like popcorn)• Often have noticeable vertical development• Cells can be rather isolated or they can be

grouped together in clusters as shown• The base of a cumulus cloud can look like a

stratus cloud if it is overhead. • Thick cumulus can make skies dark (filters

out sun’s rays)

Page 11: Lecture 9 (11/04) METR 1111 Cloud Types. Cloud Classification In 1803, Luke Howard devised the basic system of cloud classification Still used today Based

Combining Shapes & Heights

• Many different names of clouds combine:

- a height (cirro-, alto-, nimbo)

- a shape (cirrus, stratus, cumulus)

• Let’s look at examples of these word combinations to describe different cloud types.

Page 12: Lecture 9 (11/04) METR 1111 Cloud Types. Cloud Classification In 1803, Luke Howard devised the basic system of cloud classification Still used today Based

Cirrocumulus

• high cumulus clouds

• Can see individual “puffy” features

Page 13: Lecture 9 (11/04) METR 1111 Cloud Types. Cloud Classification In 1803, Luke Howard devised the basic system of cloud classification Still used today Based

Cirrostratus• High-level stratus clouds

• Not as thin as cirrus and less defined than cumulus

Page 14: Lecture 9 (11/04) METR 1111 Cloud Types. Cloud Classification In 1803, Luke Howard devised the basic system of cloud classification Still used today Based

Altocumulus• Mid level cumulus clouds

Page 15: Lecture 9 (11/04) METR 1111 Cloud Types. Cloud Classification In 1803, Luke Howard devised the basic system of cloud classification Still used today Based

Altostratus• Mid level stratus clouds

Page 16: Lecture 9 (11/04) METR 1111 Cloud Types. Cloud Classification In 1803, Luke Howard devised the basic system of cloud classification Still used today Based

Stratocumulus• Cross between stratus and cumulus

Page 17: Lecture 9 (11/04) METR 1111 Cloud Types. Cloud Classification In 1803, Luke Howard devised the basic system of cloud classification Still used today Based

Nimbostratus

• Stratus clouds that are precipitating

Page 18: Lecture 9 (11/04) METR 1111 Cloud Types. Cloud Classification In 1803, Luke Howard devised the basic system of cloud classification Still used today Based

Cumulonimbus• Cumulus cloud with precipitation

Page 19: Lecture 9 (11/04) METR 1111 Cloud Types. Cloud Classification In 1803, Luke Howard devised the basic system of cloud classification Still used today Based

Orographic Clouds

• Clouds can also be caused by mountains or hills

• Result to air flowing up and over mountains which causes condensation to occur and clouds to form

• Different types of clouds caused by orographic lift follow

Page 20: Lecture 9 (11/04) METR 1111 Cloud Types. Cloud Classification In 1803, Luke Howard devised the basic system of cloud classification Still used today Based

Cap Clouds• Air containing water vapor lifted until it is

saturated, producing liquid water cloud droplets which can "cap" the summit. (cap cloud over Mt. Ranier)

Page 21: Lecture 9 (11/04) METR 1111 Cloud Types. Cloud Classification In 1803, Luke Howard devised the basic system of cloud classification Still used today Based

Lenticular Clouds• Lenticular means “like a lens”

• Looks like flying saucers

• Forms from air rising up a mountain

Page 22: Lecture 9 (11/04) METR 1111 Cloud Types. Cloud Classification In 1803, Luke Howard devised the basic system of cloud classification Still used today Based

Kelvin-Helmholtz Billows• Occurs in regions of strong density and

velocity changes. (dynamics class)

Page 23: Lecture 9 (11/04) METR 1111 Cloud Types. Cloud Classification In 1803, Luke Howard devised the basic system of cloud classification Still used today Based

Contrails• Contrail is short for “condensation trails”

• Formed from vapor contained in the exhaust of a jet engine when it condenses in cold air aloft

Page 24: Lecture 9 (11/04) METR 1111 Cloud Types. Cloud Classification In 1803, Luke Howard devised the basic system of cloud classification Still used today Based

A good web page to visit

• A great website for clouds (where I got most of the lecture material) is:

• http://vortex.plymouth.edu/cloud.html

Page 25: Lecture 9 (11/04) METR 1111 Cloud Types. Cloud Classification In 1803, Luke Howard devised the basic system of cloud classification Still used today Based

Announcements

• Read Chapter 11 - How to Predict the Weather (pages 181 – 196)

• Complete Homework 9 about cloud types• Only 4 more lectures!!! (So you can start

getting ready to burn your books!)• If you have a question during the quiz or on

the homework, you can ask me a question. I can’t help if you leave the answer blank.