cumulonimbiform

navigate by keyword : activity alphanumeric altitude amateur approximate ascending askesian atlases british broad chemist cirriform classification classifications classified cloud clouds complex convective crossclassified cumuliform cumulonimbiform derived five forms heaps instability interests level list major manufacturing mesosphere mesospheric meteorologist names nomenclature often order patches physical presentation range ripples rolls science sheets stratiform stratocumuliform stratosphere stratospheric structures subdivided subtypes summarisation system systems that towers troposphere tufts wisps

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Clouds
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The list of cloud types is a summarisation of the modern systems of cloud classification used in the troposphere, stratosphere, and mesosphere. The ten basic genus-types in the troposphere have Latin names derived from five physical forms. These are, in approximate ascending order of instability or convective activity: stratiform sheets; cirriform wisps and patches; stratocumuliform patches, rolls, and ripples; cumuliform heaps and tufts, and cumulonimbiform towers that often have complex structures. The forms are cross-classified by altitude range or level into ten basic genus types. Most genera are divided into species, some of which are common to more than one genus. Most genera and species can be subdivided into varieties, also with Latin names, some of which are common to more than one genus or species. 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 have been classified and illustrated in cloud atlases. Mesospheric and stratospheric clouds have their own classifications with common names for the major types and alpha-numeric nomenclature for the subtypes.


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