APOD Next: the Coming NASA Astronomy Picture of the Day Before it Goes Live. Please be Kind and Share with Proper Care.

Showing posts with label clouds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label clouds. Show all posts

Monday, January 4, 2010

Next APOD: 2010 January 5 - A Roll Cloud Over Uruguay

APOD Next the Coming NASA Astronomy Picture of the Day

APOD: 2010 January 5 - A Roll Cloud Over Uruguay

ap100105_html

A Roll Cloud Over Uruguay
Credit & Copyright: Daniela Mirner Eberl

Explanation: What kind of cloud is this? A roll cloud. These rare long clouds may form near advancing cold fronts. In particular, a downdraft from an advancing storm front can cause moist warm air to rise, cool below its dew point, and so form a cloud. When this happens uniformly along an extended front, a roll cloud may form. Roll clouds may actually have air circulating along the long horizontal axis of the cloud. A roll cloud is not thought to be able to morph into a tornado. Unlike a similar shelf cloud, a roll cloud, a type of Arcus cloud, is completely detached from their parent cumulonimbus cloud. Pictured above, a roll cloud extends far into the distance in 2009 January above Las Olas Beach in Maldonado, Uruguay.

Note: An APOD editor will review astronomy images of 2009,
hosted by the Amateur Astronomers Association of New York on Friday, January 8 at the American Museum of Natural History, NYC.

If you are a digger please respect the submit enough to use a description. There is now no reason not to, you have it already. http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap100105.html