Cumulus (Cu)

  • Cumulus – Low Clouds
    Heights in metres: between 300 metres and 2,000 metres.
    Height in feet: between 1,000 and 6,500 feet.
    Height in miles: between 0.2 miles and 1.2 miles.
    Height in kilometres: between 0.3km and 2km.
  • Cumulus
    – A cumulus cloud is the classic “puffy” or “cotton-like” cloud often seen on sunny days.
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  • Key features of Cumulus clouds
    – Most cumulus clouds are “fair-weather clouds,” indicating calm, sunny conditions.
    – However, if they grow vertically, they can develop into storm clouds.
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  • Simple way to remember
    – If you look up and the sky is just a dull gray blanket with no distinct cloud shapes, you’re probably seeing stratus clouds.
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  • Here’s the breakdown, what you’re seeing:
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    oo– Four main cloud type ~ Cumulus clouds.
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    oo– two official varieties (types within Stratus)
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Four main type of Cumulus

  • Cumulus congestus
    – Also called “towering cumulus,” these are taller than they are wide and can produce light to moderate rain showers.
  • Cumulus fractus
    – Ragged, broken shreds of cloud that are either just starting to form or are dissipating.
  • Cumulus humilis
    – Small, flattened clouds that are wider than they are tall; these are the typical “fair weather” variety.
  • Cumulus mediocris
    – Medium-sized clouds that are roughly as wide as they are tall.

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Two official varieties (types within Cumulus)

  • Stratus fractus
    – ragged fragments of low cloud hanging below or near a broken layer.
  • Stratus nebulosus
    – Smooth, uniform, featureless gray layer.
    – Relationship to fog.


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Images of Cumulus by Derek Rowley

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Back to Earth Features – Clouds Development
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