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What cloud moves the fastest?

High cirrus
cirrus
Cirrus (cloud classification symbol: Ci) is a genus of high cloud made of ice crystals. Cirrus clouds typically appear delicate and wispy with white strands. Cirrus are usually formed when warm, dry air rises, causing water vapor deposition onto rocky or metallic dust particles at high altitudes.
https://en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Cirrus_cloud
clouds
are pushed along by the jet stream and can travel at more than 100 mph. Clouds that are part of a thunderstorm usually travel at 30 to 40 mph.
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Why do some clouds move faster?

The higher up you go in the sky, the faster the clouds move. This is because the wind is faster at higher heights above the surface. We sometimes get clouds that can travel huge distances, and cross the oceans. These clouds are following a particularly strong wind, called the jet stream.
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Do heavier clouds move faster?

This is because the wind blows at different speeds at different levels of the atmosphere. The lower the cloud is in the atmosphere, the lighter the wind, and therefore, the slower the cloud travels. On the other hand, the wind gets stronger higher up in the atmosphere, which means that the clouds travel faster.
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Where do the fastest clouds come from?

The wind is often strongest in the upper troposphere (there are no clouds in the upper atmosphere), so upper tropospheric clouds will move faster than near-surface clouds.
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Why do dark clouds move fast?

Why do black clouds move faster than white clouds? Clouds drift with the wind. The wind can change direction and velocity with altitude. So clouds at one altitude can move faster than clouds at other altitudes.
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Kevin's Classroom: How fast do clouds move?

What are low fast moving clouds called?

Fractus: Low, ragged stratiform or cumuliform cloud elements that normally are. unattached to larger thunderstorm or cold frontal cloud bases. Also known as scud, fractus clouds can look ominous, but by themselves are not dangerous.
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What are low fast moving clouds?

Stratocumulus are low clouds that generally move faster than cumulus and are not as well defined in appearance (recall the techniques of observing clouds). They tend to spread more horizontally rather than vertically. Like cumulus, the bases of stratocumulus are normally darker than the tops.
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Do higher or lower clouds move faster?

The higher up you go in the sky, the faster the clouds move. This is because the wind is faster at higher heights above the surface. We sometimes get clouds that can travel huge distances, and cross the oceans. These clouds are following a particularly strong wind, called the jet stream.
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How fast can clouds form?

During a thunderstorm's formative stage, updrafts of 40 mph (or faster) are at work lifting air to condensation and allowing cumulus clouds to grow to heights of 50,000 feet in just 15 or 20 minutes.
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How fast do clouds fall?

The average cloud droplet has a terminal fall velocity of 1.3 cm per second in still air. To put this into perspective, the average cloud droplet falling from a typical low cloud base of 500 meters/1,650 feet would take more than 10 hours to reach the ground.
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Do storm clouds move faster?

It depends on the situation and the type of cloud that determines the speed. For instance, high cirrus clouds can travel at a speed of more than 100 mph during the jet stream. Clouds during the thunderstorm can travel at speed up to 30 to 40 mph. The speed of the clouds is dependent on the movement of the wind.
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Why are clouds GREY?

As the size and concentration of the hydrometeors increases, less and less sunlight penetrates the cloud, resulting in multiple scattering. We perceive these clouds as dark clouds in varying shades of grey.
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Do clouds move for kids?

How do clouds move? Clouds move with the wind. High cirrus clouds are pushed along by the jet stream, sometimes traveling at more than 100 miles-per-hour. When clouds are part of a thunderstorm they usually travel at 30 to 40 mph.
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How fast are the clouds in KM?

High clouds are often driven by a jet stream (fast-moving air), which may reach speeds up to 100 km/hr. Clouds normally travel at a pace of 30-40 km/hr during a thunderstorm.
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Why do clouds not fly away?

Clouds are composed primarily of small water droplets and, if it's cold enough, ice crystals. The vast majority of clouds you see contain droplets and/or crystals that are too small to have any appreciable fall velocity. So the particles continue to float with the surrounding air.
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How long do clouds move?

The simple answer is, clouds can travel for hundreds of miles in one day, but it just depends on where they formed in the atmosphere. Low clouds can form as low as 5,000 feet, where other clouds, such as cirrus, form at 30,000+ feet.
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How heavy is a cloud?

Answer: Thus, a 'typical' fair weather cumulus cloud "weighs" about 1 billion 400 million pounds, or about 800 million pounds less than dry air of equal volume. Thats a lot of weight!
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Can clouds form in the dark?

What are Noctilucent clouds? Noctilucent clouds are extremely rare collections of ice crystals, occasionally appearing in late clear summer evenings after sunset, but before it gets completely dark.
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Why are clouds white?

In a cloud sunlight is scattered equally, meaning that the sunlight continues to remain white and gives clouds their distinctive white appearance.
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Are higher clouds colder?

High clouds are much colder than low clouds and the surface. They radiate less energy to space than low clouds do.
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Where do clouds go at night?

Clouds do not disappear. They just become invisible water vapor by different mechanisms. Usually, the micro-droplets of water are transformed into another form of water.
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What cloud looks like a tornado?

Scud clouds are cloud fragments that seem to hang much lower in the sky than the rest of the clouds and they can even form a point that makes them look just like a tornado. In actuality, these clouds are just smaller bits of condensation that aren't attached to the higher layers of thick cumulonimbus storm clouds.
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What is a tornado cloud called?

A tornado is often made visible by a distinctive funnel-shaped cloud. Commonly called the condensation funnel, the funnel cloud is a tapered column of water droplets that extends downward from the base of the parent cloud.
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Are there clouds that don't move?

All clouds move, but give the illusion of stationarity either because the conditions that create them are stationary (e.g. mountains), or they are so high that their motion is too slow to register. Winds at different elevations blow at different speeds and directions.
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