Friday, March 30, 2012

Altostratus Clouds

Altostratus Clouds


Altostratus Clouds are located worldwide, but are more coarse in mid latitudes. These clouds are found in the mid levels of the atmosphere and can be just a thin veil fluctuating to a layer 2,000-3,000m thick. Commonly Altostratus will consist of ice crystals near the top and water crystals lower down. They are always a sign of a necessary amount of moisture being held in those layers and cover a very large area, sometimes over thousands of square miles. Commonly it is too thick, but when it is thin the Sun and Moon may be visible straight through Altostratus.

Altostratus Clouds

Altostratus Clouds

Altostratus Clouds


Altostratus Clouds



Altostratus Clouds

Altostratus Clouds form at warm fronts and is the follow of condensation when warm moist is lifted above cooler air. When it is sufficiently thick Altostratus can produce rain or snow over a very large area.

When stratus cloud covers the whole sky it can be difficult to decree either it is low level or mid level cloud. As a normal rule of thumb if you can make out a texture in the cloud deck then it is likely to be low level stratus, if there is no discernible buildings and appears level and featureless then it is likely to be mid level altostratus clouds.

Summarised facts about Altostratus Clouds:

Altostratus clouds regularly form ahead of a front producing widespread and often continuous precipitation.

These clouds Commonly form in the middle of 2,000 and 3,000m and often produce long, steady rain.

Altostratus are thinner if formed at higher altitudes but are heavier and more dense if closer to the ground.

They are formless gray to bluish clouds that form a thin veil over the sun and moon.

Altostratus are coarse in the advance of a warm front, preceding nimbostratus clouds.

Altostratus clouds are potentially dangerous because they can cause ice to form on the wings of aircraft that fly trough them.

There are a amount of features allowing the observer to distinguish varied stratus clouds from each other:

Stratus clouds bring much Lighter precipitation (drizzle) than nimbostratus;

Altostratus clouds are Lighter in colour and less opaque than nimbostratus, so sunLight can be seen straight through them;

Cirrostratus clouds never bring precipitation and have a thin, whitish, veil-like structure, characteristic for cirrus;

Stratocumulus bring only light precipitation and have a clearly visible base with no ifs ands or buts distinguished isolate cloud elements.

If the altostratus clouds cover a large portion of the sky, are approaching from the direction of the wind at the clouds' level, and are expanding in coverage, then widespread precipitation could be imaginable in the area.

Altostratus Clouds

Visit : Rechargeable Batteries | Green Battery Chargers | AA Batteries Black Friday Sale Classic Hiking Boots

No comments:

Post a Comment