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Cumulonimbus calvus - praecipitatio Altocumulus Cumulus
capillatus virga Altostratus
pannus Nimbostratus
incus Stratocumulus
mamma Cumulus
pileus Flamma
velum Homo
arcus
murus
cauda
flumen
tuba
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Accretion
Growth of a cloud or precipitation particle by the collision and union of a frozen particle
(ice crystal or snowflake) with a supercooled liquid droplet which freezes on impact.
Advection
Transport of water or air along with its properties (e.g. temperature, chemical tracers) by
the motion of the fluid. Regarding the general distinction between advection and
convection, the former describes the predominantly horizontal, large-scale motions of the
atmosphere or ocean, while convection describes the predominantly vertical, locally
induced motions.
Agglomeration
The process in which precipitation particles grow by collision with, and by assimilation of,
cloud particles or other precipitation particles.
Aggregation
The process in which solid precipitation particles combine in the atmosphere to produce
larger particles, such as hailstones.
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Anvil
See supplementary feature incus.
A cirriform cloud with an anvil shape, which forms the upper part of a well-developed
Cumulonimbus. Its glaciated top spreads out horizontally upon reaching the tropopause or
by the action of the winds aloft.
Anvil crawler
[colloq.]. A lightning discharge occurring within the anvil of a thunderstorm, characterized
by one or more channels that appear to crawl along the underside of the anvil. They
typically appear during the weakening or dissipating stage of the parent thunderstorm or
during an active mesoscale convective system.
Anvil dome
See overshooting top.
Anvil rollover
[colloq.]. A circular or semicircular lip of clouds along the underside of the upwind part of a
back-sheared anvil, indicating rapid expansion of the anvil. See cumuliform anvil, knuckles,
mushroom.
Anvil zits
Beaver('s) tail
[colloq.]. A particular type of inflow band with a relatively broad, flat appearance
suggestive of a beaver's tail. It is attached to a supercell's general updraft and is oriented
roughly parallel to the pseudo-warm front. As with any inflow band, cloud elements move
towards the updraft. Its size and shape change as the strength of the inflow changes. See
also inflow stinger.
Bergeron-Findeisen process
A theoretical explanation of the process by which precipitation particles may form within a
mixed cloud (composed of both ice crystals and liquid water drops).
Black ice
(1) Thin, new ice on freshwater or saltwater, appearing dark in colour because of its
transparency, which is a result of its columnar grain structure. On lakes, black ice is
commonly overlain by white ice formed from refrozen snow or slush. (2) A popular
alternative for glaze. A thin sheet of ice, relatively dark in appearance, may form when
light rain or drizzle falls on a road surface that is at a temperature below 0 C or,
alternatively, when water already on the road surface subsequently freezes when the
temperature thereof falls below freezing point. It may also be formed when supercooled
fog droplets are intercepted by buildings, fences and vegetation.
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Cap cloud
Stationary orographic cloud on or above an isolated mountain peak forming a cap around
the summit.
Cell
Cirriform
As Cirrus. More generally, descriptive of clouds composed of small particles, mostly ice
crystals that are fairly widely dispersed, usually resulting in relative transparency and
whiteness and often producing halo phenomena not observed with other cloud forms.
They include all types of Cirrus, Cirrocumulus, and Cirrostratus clouds.
Cloud bank
Cloudburst
[colloq.]. In popular terminology, any sudden and heavy fall of rain, almost always of the
shower type.
Cloud streets
Clouds arranged in lines roughly parallel to the wind direction and appearing, because of
perspective, to converge towards a point or two opposite points on the horizon called the
radiation point(s). See variety radiatus. The cloud most frequently appearing in cloud
streets is Cumulus mediocris.
Coalescence
Process of formation of a single liquid water drop by the union of two or more colliding
drops.
Cold pool
Collar cloud
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A ring of cloud that may be observed on rare occasions, surrounding the upper part of a
wall cloud (murus).
Condensation
(1) The transition from the gaseous to the liquid state. (2) The physical process by which
water vapour is transformed into dew, fog or cloud droplets.
Condensation funnel
See tuba.
Condensation level
Condensation nucleus
Cloud which forms in the wake of an aircraft when the atmosphere at flying level is
sufficiently cold and moist. See contrails and dissipation trail.
Contrail
Convection
Organized motions within a layer of air leading to the vertical transport of heat, momentum,
etc.
Convective clouds
Cumuliform cloud that forms in an atmospheric layer made unstable by heating at the
base or cooling at the top.
Cumuliform anvil
Cumuliform
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appearance, they are classed in the species castellanus (of the genera Stratocumulus,
Altocumulus, Cirrus and Cirrocumulus). When they constitute elements separated into
tufts they are classed in the species floccus (of the genera Stratocumulus, Altocumulus,
Cirrus and Cirrocumulus).
Debris cloud
A rotating cloud of dust or debris, near or on the ground, often appearing beneath a
condensation funnel and surrounding the base of a tornado.
Deposition
The formation of ice on a surface directly from water vapour, without passing through a
liquid phase.
The temperature at which the air is saturated (the relative humidity is 100%) with respect
to water vapour over a water surface.
A clearly delineated lane forming behind an aircraft flying in a thin cloud layer; the
opposite of a condensation trail.
Downburst
Violent and damaging downdraught reaching the surface, associated with a severe
thunderstorm.
Downslope windstorm
A very strong, usually gusty, and occasionally violent wind that blows down the lee slope
of a mountain range, often reaching its peak strength near the foot of the mountains and
weakening rapidly farther away from the mountains.
Dry line
Narrow zone, other than a warm, cold, or occluded front, across which there is a distinct
gradient in the moisture content of the air near the Earths surface.
Electrical storm
Elevated convection
Convection occurring within an elevated layer, i.e. a layer in which the lowest portion is
based above the Earths surface.
Entrainment
The mixing of environmental air into a pre-existing organized cloud or an air current so
that the environmental air becomes part of the current or the cloud.
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Etage
A meteorological term used in the 1956 and 1975 editions of the International Cloud Atlas
(ICA) to define the range of levels within which clouds of certain genera occur more
frequently. tage has been replaced with level, primarily because it can be easily
translated into many different languages. The use of tage in this context was proposed
by J.B. Lamarck (1802) in the first published classification of clouds; also, the grouping of
cloud height in the WMO classification: high tage (38 km); middle tage (24 km); and
low tage (surface to 2 km).
Evaporation
The physical process by which a liquid or solid is transformed to the gaseous state; the
opposite of condensation.
Fallstreak
Fallstreak hole
Fast ice
Sea ice which forms and remains fast along the coast, where it is attached to the shore, to
an ice wall, to an ice front, between shoals or grounded icebergs. Vertical fluctuations may
be observed during changes of sea level. Fast ice may be formed in situ from seawater or
by freezing of floating ice of any age to the shore. It may extend a few metres or several
hundred kilometres from the coast.
Feeder band
Flanking line
A line of Cumulus or towering Cumulus clouds connected to, and extending outward from,
the most active part of a supercell. The line normally has a stair-step appearance, with the
tallest clouds closest to the main storm.
Flurry (snow)
Common term for a light snow shower, lasting for only a short period of time.
Foehn
A warm, dry wind on the lee side of a mountain range, the warmth and dryness of the air
being due to adiabatic compression as the air descends the mountain slopes. In the USA,
the term chinook is used for foehn winds in the Rocky and Sierra Mountains.
Foehn gap
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A break in an extensive cloud deck or cloud shield, usually a band parallel to and
downwind of the mountain ridge line.
Especially visible in satellite pictures, this cloud-free zone results from the strong sinking
motion on the lee side of a mountain barrier during a foehn
Cloud formation which, during a foehn episode, lies over and along a mountain ridge and
which presents, to an observer downwind from the ridge, the appearance of a vertical wall.
Front
A boundary or transition zone between two airmasses of different density and thus
(usually) of different temperature. A moving front is named according to the advancing
airmass, e.g. a cold front, if colder air is advancing.
The temperature at which air is saturated with respect to water vapour over an ice surface
Frost smoke
Fumulus
[colloq.]. A contraction of the words fume and Cumulus, indicating water-droplet clouds
that form within the top of rising plumes from smokestacks, cooling towers or open fires.
This cloud is classified as Cumulus homogenitus.
Graupel
Snow pellets. Precipitation, usually of brief duration, consisting of crisp, white, opaque ice
particles, round or conical in shape and about 25 mm in diameter. Same as snow pellets
or small hail. Soft hail was officially renamed snow pellets in 1956.
Gravity wave
A wave disturbance in which buoyancy acts as the restoring force on parcels displaced
from hydrostatic equilibrium.
Gust front
The leading edge of a mesoscale pressure dome separating the outflow air in a
convective storm from the environmental air. This boundary, which is marked by upward
motion along it and downward motion behind it, is followed by a surge of gusty winds on
or near the ground. A gust front is often associated with a pressure jump, wind shift,
temperature drop, and sometimes with heavy precipitation. Gust fronts are often marked
by arcus clouds.
Strong wind, producing a duststorm or sandstorm, in arid or semi-arid regions of the world.
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Hygroscopic substance
A substance that readily attracts water from its surroundings which in meteorology is
applied principally to condensation nuclei such as salt etc.
Ice prisms
Ice storm
Inflow bands
Inflow stinger
Inversion
Inversions and stable layers inhibit vertical motion, often limiting the vertical extent of
cumuliform clouds. If the air below an inversion is relatively moist, the inversion often caps
a layer of stratiform cloud.
Ionosphere
That part of the atmosphere, extending approximately from 70 to 500 km, in which ions
and free electrons exist in sufficient quantities to reflect electromagnetic waves.
Knuckles
Lapse rate
The rate of change of an atmospheric variable, usually temperature, with height. For
example, a steep temperature lapse rate is a rapid decrease of temperature with height
Layer
Layer is used to describe a sheet of considerable horizontal extent; often covering the
whole sky. A term of limited meaning used within the Technical Regulations of the
International Cloud Atlas (1956 and 1975 and its predecessor of 1939).
Lee Wave
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Any wave disturbance that is caused by, and is therefore stationary with respect to, some
barrier in the fluid flow. Whether the wave is a gravity wave, inertia wave, barotropic wave,
etc., will depend on the structure of the fluid and the dimensions of the barrier.
Levanter cloud
The Spanish and most widely used term for an east or northeast wind occurring along the
coast and inland from southern France to the Straits of Gibraltar.
Macroburst
An intense, localized downdraft of air that spreads on the ground, usually below a
Cumulonimbus, causing rapid changes in wind direction and speed. The diameter is
greater than 4 km. Compare with microburst.
Mares tails
Long, well-defined wisps of cirrus clouds, thicker at one end than the other. See Cirrus
uncinus.
Mesocyclone
Mesopause
Mesosphere
The region of the atmosphere, situated between the stratopause and the mesopause, in
which the temperature generally decreases with height.
Microburst
An intense, localized downdraft of air that spreads over the ground, usually below a
Cumulonimbus, causing rapid changes in wind direction and speed. The diameter is 4 km
or less. Compare with macroburst.
Mixed cloud
(also known as a mixed phase cloud). A cloud in which ice particles are mixed with
supercooled droplets of water. This can lead to mixed icing conditions.
Morning glory
An elongated cloud band, visually similar to a roll cloud, usually appearing in the morning
hours, when the atmosphere is relatively stable. Morning glories result from perturbations
related to gravitational waves in a stable boundary layer. They are similar to ripples on a
water surface; several parallel morning glories can often be seen propagating in the same
direction. See species volutus.
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Mountain waves
An atmospheric gravity wave, formed when stable airflow passes over a mountain or
mountain barrier.
Multi-vortex tornado
A tornado in which two or more condensation funnels or debris clouds are present at the
same time, often rotating about a common centre or about each other. Multiple-vortex
tornadoes can be especially damaging.
Needle ice
A phenomenon that appears similar to hoar frost but occurring when the temperature of
the soil is above 0C and the surface air temperatu re is below 0C. The subsurface liquid
water is brought by capillary action where it freezes and contributes to a growing needle-
like ice column.
Opaque
A property that does not allow light to pass through so that objects on the other side are
totally obscured. See variety opacus.
Orographic cloud
Cloud whose presence and shape are determined by the relief of the Earths surface.
Orographic lift
Lifting of air caused by its passage up and over mountains or other sloping terrain.
Ozone hole
A characteristic severe depletion of stratospheric ozone that occurs each spring over the
polar regions.
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Polar vortex
The large-scale cyclonic circulation in the middle and upper troposphere and extending
into the stratosphere, centred generally in the polar regions.
Precipitation
A hydrometeor consisting of a fall of an ensemble of particles. The forms of precipitation
are: rain, drizzle, snow, snow grains, snow pellets, diamond dust, hail and ice pellets.
Protuberance
A projection or a bulge used to describe swellings, turrets and towers seen in many
clouds; e.g. the small towers seen in Cumulis mediocris, the sometimes complex mass of
towers in Cumulus congestus or the very small turrets of Cirrus castellanus.
Pyrocumulus
A Cumulus cloud (Cumulus flammagenitus) formed by a rising thermal from a fire, or
enhanced by buoyant plume emissions from an industrial combustion process (Cumulus
homogenitus).
Rain-free base
A dark, horizontal cloud base with no visible precipitation beneath it. It typically marks the
location of a thunderstorm updraft. Tornadoesmay develop from wall cloud attached to the
rain-free base, or from the rain-free base itself
Rain shadow
Region, situated on the lee side of a mountain or mountain range, where the rainfall is
much less than on the windward side.
Relative humidity
The ratio (%) of the observed vapour pressure to the saturation vapour pressure with
respect to water at the same temperature and pressure.
Roll cloud
Volutus.
Rotor cloud
Turbulent cloud formation in the lee of large mountain barriers. The air in the cloud rotates
around an axis parallel to the range.
Rotors
Circulation of flow about a horizontal or nearly horizontal axis that is usually associated
with flow over the lee side of a barrier, such as a mountain range. The rotation may
extend to the ground, cause hazards to aircraft, and carry large amounts of dust aloft.
Saturation
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An atmospheric condition in which air holds the maximum amount of water vapour that it
can hold at the observed temperature and pressure, whether over a surface of water or of
ice. In this condition the relative humidity is 100%.
Scud
(fractus). The accessory cloud pannus, ragged low clouds usually Stratus fractus or
Cumulus fractus that occur below the main cloud base.
Sea-of-cloud
The appearance of the upper surface of a layer of cloud which shows undulations of very
different lengths. The whole aspect then suggests waves on the sea.
Sheet
Sheet is used to describe a relatively thin layer that covers less than the whole sky. See
layer. A term of limited meaning used in the Technical Regulations of the International
Cloud Atlas (1956 and 1975 and its predecessor of 1939).
Shelf cloud
See supplementary feature arcus. A low, horizontal wedge-shaped arcus cloud,
associated with a thunderstorm gust front (or occasionally with a cold front, even in the
absence of a thunderstorms). Unlike the roll cloud, the shelf cloud is attached to the base
of the parent cloud above it (usually a thunderstorm). Rising cloud motion can often be
seen in the leading (outer) part of the shelf cloud, while the underside often appears
turbulent, boiling, and wind-torn.
Sleet
Depending on the region, precipitation of rain and snow mixed, rain and hail, rain and ice
pellets, melting snow, or sudden and brief rainfall with wind and hail.
Smoking mountain
See banner cloud.
Snowflake
Agglomeration of snow crystals.
Snowdrift
Mass of snow heaped up by the wind and deposited along an obstruction or an irregularity
of the terrain.
Sprouting
Sprouting is used to describe the appearance of growing upper parts of clouds such as
Cumulus mediocris and congestus and Cumulonimbus calvus.
Squall
Atmospheric phenomenon characterized by an abrupt and large increase in wind speed
with a duration of minutes which diminish rather suddenly. It is often accompanied by
showers or thundershowers
Stable layer
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A layer in which the temperature lapse rate is less than the dry adiabatic lapse rate (or
moist adiabatic lapse rate, if saturated). Vertical motion within the stable layer is inhibited.
Steam fog
Fog formed when water vapour is added to air that is much colder than the vapour's
source; most commonly, when very cold air drifts across relatively warm water.
Stratiform
Descriptive of clouds of extensive horizontal development, in contrast to the vertically
developed cumuliform types.
Stratopause
Top of the inversion layer in the upper stratosphere at about 50 km to 55 km.
Stratosphere
The region of the atmosphere, situated between the tropopause and the stratopause, in
which the temperature generally increases with height.
Sublimation
The process of phase transition from solid directly to vapor in the absence of melting.
Supercell
A thunderstorm with a persistent rotating updraft. Supercells are rare, but are responsible
for a remarkably high percentage of severe weather events. especially tornadoes,
extremely large hailstones and damaging straight-line winds.
Supercooled
Liquid water at a temperature below the freezing point.
Superposed
Placed above or upon something else, or one upon another. Used in describing the cloud
variety duplicatus where cloud patches, sheets or layers may be at slightly different levels
or partly merged.
Supersaturation
The condition existing in a given portion of the atmosphere when the relative humidity is
greater than 100%.
Surface-based convection
Convection occurring within a surface-based layer, i.e. a layer in which the lowest portion
is based at or very near the Earths surface. Compare with elevated convection.
Table cloth
The cloud that forms over the top of Table Mountain, Cape Town, South Africa, due to
orographic lift.
Tail cloud
A horizontal, tail-shaped cloud (not a funnel cloud) at low levels extending from the
precipitation cascade region of a supercell towards the wall cloud. The base of the tail
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cloud is about the same as that of the wall cloud. Cloud motion in the tail cloud is away
from the precipitation and towards the wall cloud, with rapid upward motion often
observed near the junction of the tail and wall cloud.
Thermal lifting
Updraught produced locally above a surface warmer than its immediate surroundings
Translucent
A property that allows light to pass through diffusely so that objects on the other side are
not clearly visible. See variety translucidus.
Transparent
A property that allows light to pass through so that objects on the other side are clearly
visible.
Tropopause
The boundary between the troposphere and the stratosphere, where an abrupt change in
lapse rate usually occurs.
Troposphere
Lower part of the Earths atmosphere, extending from the surface up to the tropopause, in
which the temperature generally decreases with height.
Turbulence
Random and continuously changing air motions which are superposed on the mean
motion of the air.
Twister
[colloq.]. Tornado.
Updraft base
Alternate term for a rain-free base.
Vortex
A whirling mass of air in the form of a column or spiral. It need not be oriented vertically
but could, for example, be rotating around a horizontal axis.
Wall cloud
See supplementary feature murus.
Wave cloud
Orographic cloud, at the crest of a stationary wave, formed in an airflow crossing a range
of hills or mountains.
Wind shear
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The local variation of the wind vector or any of its components in a given direction.
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