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  2. List of cloud types - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_cloud_types

    Cloud chart showing major tropospheric cloud types identified by standard two-letter abbreviations and grouped by altitude and form. See table below for full names and classification. The table that follows is very broad in scope much like the cloud genera template near the bottom of the article and upon which this table is partly based.

  3. Template:PBS Kids shows - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Template:PBS_Kids_shows

    Template documentation This template's initial visibility currently defaults to autocollapse , meaning that if there is another collapsible item on the page (a navbox, sidebar , or table with the collapsible attribute ), it is hidden apart from its title bar; if not, it is fully visible.

  4. Cloud - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cloud

    A group of accessory clouds comprise formations that are associated mainly with upward-growing cumuliform and cumulonimbiform clouds of free convection. Pileus is a cap cloud that can form over a cumulonimbus or large cumulus cloud, [ 99 ] whereas a velum feature is a thin horizontal sheet that sometimes forms like an apron around the middle or ...

  5. Cloud atlas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cloud_atlas

    The 1890 Cloud Atlas is the first known cloud atlas and book of this title, by Hildebrandsson, Wladimir Köppen, and Georg von Neumayer. [5] It was an expensive quarto book of chromolithographs reproducing 10 color oil paintings and 12 photographs for comparison, and was designed to explore the advantages and disadvantages of photography for the scientific illustration of cloud forms. [6]

  6. International Cloud Atlas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Cloud_Atlas

    The International Cloud Atlas or simply the Cloud Atlas, is a cloud atlas that was first published in 1896 [1] and has remained in print since. Its initial purposes included aiding the training of meteorologists and promoting more consistent use of vocabulary describing clouds , which were both important for early weather forecasting .

  7. Stratus cloud - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stratus_cloud

    Stratus clouds may also form from formation mechanisms that are not typical for the cloud type, for example, Stratus homogenitus, which are stratus formed by human activity, Stratus cataractagenitus, which are formed from the spray of waterfalls, and Stratus silvagenitus, which are formed by evaporation or evapotranspiration occurring in a forest.

  8. Stratocumulus cloud - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stratocumulus_cloud

    Stratocumulus clouds are the main type of cloud that can produce crepuscular rays. Thin stratocumulus clouds are also often the cause of corona effects around the Moon at night. All stratocumulus subtypes are coded C L 5 except when formed from free convective mother clouds (C L 4) or when formed separately from co-existing (C L 8).

  9. Cirrus cloud - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cirrus_cloud

    These clouds do not last long, and they tend to change into cirrus because as the water vapor continues to deposit on the ice crystals, they eventually begin to fall, destroying the upward convection. The cloud then dissipates into cirrus. [75] Cirrocumulus clouds come in four species: stratiformis, lenticularis, castellanus, and floccus. [72]