An anvil cloud is a tall, anvil-shaped thundercloud.
An anvil head cloud is called a cumulonimbus or a very well developed anvil shape is a cumulonimbus incus. These clouds are usually associated with severe thunderstorms and possibly tornadoes.
Mammatus. Mammatus is cloud that hangs from an anvil of a mature storm cloud and brings severe weather especially tornadoes. Another one is called Cumulonimbus. These clouds bring VERY heavy rain or thunder storms.
Mammatus clouds form on the underside of a storm cloud and are most often associated with the anvil cloud that extends from a cumulonimbus. They have also been seen under altocumulus, altostratus, stratocumulus, and cirrus clouds, as well as volcanic ash clouds.
It the Cumulonimbus Cloud, (CB) for short. Or more commonly known as the Thunderhead. It has a distinct anvil shape to it. The longest part of the"anvil" shows which direction the storm is headed. They produce lightning, thunder, heavy rain, hail, high winds including wind sheer or micro bursts and sometimes if the conditions are right, tornadoes.
There is a particular cloud that is a thunder cloud. It is easily identifiable. It looks like a bucket of pop corn, only that it's the clouds. It is anvil shaped.
High cloud, middle cloud, low cloud, and anvil heat.
Cloud lighting
No. The anvil is part of the thunderstorm. Namely it is that part of the cloud that spreads out at the top. Tornadoes form from thunderstorms.
An anvil cloud is an anvil shaped structure at the top of a thunderstorm that results from the updraft hitting stable air, flattening, and spreading out.
The Cloud forms from UPDRAFTS of 100 MPH and when it hits the Stratsophere it flattens out to form the top of the anvil.
A thunder cloud, or Cumulonimbus cloud, looks like a massive, tall, white puffy cloud with an anvil shaped top and a very dark grey base.
An anvil head cloud is called a cumulonimbus or a very well developed anvil shape is a cumulonimbus incus. These clouds are usually associated with severe thunderstorms and possibly tornadoes.
The anvil is not part of a tornado nor is it directly related to tornadoes. When a thunderstorm forms, is produces a tall cloud called a cumulonimbus. The cloud rises until it reaches a stable layer, at which point the top spreads out flat. This flat top to the thunderstorm cloud is called the anvil. Most tornadoes are produced by a kind of thunderstorm called a supercell. Supercells usually have very well shaped anvils.
The anvil is not part of the tornado, it is part of the parent thunderstorm. The anvil forms when the storm cloud grows upward until hitting a layer of stable air that it cannot rise through. This causes the top of the storm to flatten and spread out.
A mammatus cloud is not a cloud characteristic of tornadoes, but it is often associated with severe thunderstorms. Mammatus clouds consist of small, smooth puffs of cloud that hand down from the base of a larger cloud, often the anvil of a thunderstorm.
The anvil is not actually part of a tornado. it is part of the storm that produces a tornado. Inside a thunderstorm moist air rises as long as it is warmer than its surroundings. However, when the rising cloud of the thunderstorm reaches a comparatively warm layers such as at the top of the troposphere it cannot rise any more, and will spread out, forming a wide, flat top to the storm cloud. This flat top is the anvil.
Mammatus. Mammatus is cloud that hangs from an anvil of a mature storm cloud and brings severe weather especially tornadoes. Another one is called Cumulonimbus. These clouds bring VERY heavy rain or thunder storms.