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Undulating Line of Horizon Postcard
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Undulating Line of Horizon Postcard
AssetID: 6252-000025 / Jake Rajs / Undulating Line of Horizon
Clouds are formed in Earth 's atmosphere when water evaporates into vapour from oceans , lakes , and ponds or by evapotranspiration over moist areas of Earth's land surface. The vapour rises up into colder areas of the atmosphere due to convective , orographic , or frontal lifting. The water vapour attaches itself to condensation nuclei which could be anything from dust to microscopic particles of salt and debris. Once the vapour has been cooled to saturation , the cloud becomes visible. All weather producing clouds form in the troposphere , the lowest major layer of the atmosphere. However very small amounts of water vapour can be found higher up in the stratosphere and mesosphere and may condense into very thin clouds if the air temperatures are sufficiently cold. One branch of meteorology is focused on the study of nephology or cloud physics .
Tropospheric clouds can be divided into three main categories with names based on Latin root words that indicate physical structure and process of formation. Clouds of the cirriform category are generally thin and occur mostly in the form of filaments. The other two categories are stratiform with clouds that are mostly sheet-like in structure, and cumuliform that appear heaped, rolled, and/or rippled.
In the troposphere, nine of the ten genus types are derived by cross-classifying the three categories into four families defined by altitude range; high , middle , low , and moderate vertical . Each of these families includes one stratiform and one cumuliform genus. Cirriform clouds differ in that they are only found in the high altitude family as a third member, and therefore only constitute a single genus cirrus . High stratiform and cumuliform clouds carry the prefix cirro which yield the genera cirrostratus and cirrocumulus . Middle cloud genera have the prefix alto (altostratus and altocumulus ) to distinguish them from the high clouds, while low altitude stratiform and cumuliform genera (stratus and stratocumulus ) carry no height-related prefixes. The fourth family comprises stratiform and cumuliform genera of moderate vertical extent (nimbostratus and cumulus ) that form in the low or middle altitude range. This group also has no height-related prefixes, but its stratiform genus carries the prefix nimbo to denote its ability to produce widespread precipitation.
A fifth family or sub-family of towering vertical clouds comprises only cumuliform types. One is cumulonimbus , the tenth genus type, and the other is cumulus congestus , a towering species of the genus cumulus whose other species belong to the family of moderate vertical clouds. All cloud genera except nimbostratus are divided into species and/or varieties based on specific physical characteristics of the clouds, but the cumulus genus is the only one that has species in two different altitude families.
The essentials of the modern nomenclature system for tropospheric clouds were proposed by Luke Howard , a British manufacturing chemist and an amateur meteorologist with broad interests in science , in an 1802 presentation to the Askesian Society . Since 1890, clouds are classified and illustrated in cloud atlases .
Clouds that form above the troposphere have a generally cirriform structure, but are not given Latin names based on that characteristic. Polar stratospheric clouds form at very high altitudes in polar regions of the stratosphere. They are given the name Nacreous due to the mother-of-pearl colours that are typically seen, and are sub-classified alpha-numerically according to their chemical makeup. Polar mesospheric clouds are the highest in the atmosphere and are given the Latin name noctilucent which refers to their illumination during deep twilight . They are sub-classified alpha-numerically according to specific details of their cirriform physical structure.
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Product ID: 239323228422925609
Created on 29/02/2012, 12:02
Rating: G
