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Stratus clouds: A uniform, gray and nearly featureless layer of low clouds, often less than 1,000 feet above the ground. When broken up into irregular shreds, it is called stratus fractus.
Just a solid grey, flat cloud hovering in the sky. These are referred to as stratus clouds. Stratus clouds come from the Latin word “stratus” which means layer.
Stratus fractus clouds: A ragged, gray layer of low cloud, often less than 1,000 feet above the ground, and usually occurring during inclement winter weather ...
All stratus clouds have one characteristic in common: being a uniform and flat sheet of cloud matter. These clouds generate overcast skies every day, and can persist for several hours and days.
Stratus: A gray cloud layer with a uniform base which may, if thick enough, produce drizzle, ice prisms, or snow grains. When the sun is visible through this cloud, its outline is clearly discernible.
Puffy, wispy, white and gray, we’ve seen them all this spring. Clouds come in a variety of types, and each type comes with critical information about incoming weather patterns. If you’re a ...
Stratus clouds - which are flat-shaped, close to the ground, and often grey - form as a result of warm, humid air rising up and over cooler, drier air. Stratus clouds take up more space ...
Those gray days that we all love to hate are almost always thanks to a layer of stratus. Sometimes, like today, we are treated to a slight variation of the boring stratus clouds, undulatus!
Low level clouds are found less than 7,000 feet. Stratocumulus clouds have a honeycomb look to them and allow for some peaks of sun. Stratus clouds usually cover the whole sky. They are thin.
Those featureless, gray stratus clouds that hang close to the ground can form when a mass of warm air moves over a cooler region, causing water vapor in the air to condense into water droplets.