Rain clouds and snow clouds are clouds that have their bases below 2,000 meters above the ground. In well-defined
air masses, many (or even most) clouds may have a similar cloud base because this variable is largely controlled by the thermodynamic properties of that air mass, which are relatively homogeneous on a large spatial scale. This is not the case for the
cloud tops, which can vary widely from cloud to cloud, as the depth of the cloud is determined by the strength of local
convection. Clouds greatly affect the transfer of
radiation in the atmosphere. In the thermal spectral domain, water is a strong absorber (and thus emitter, according to
Kirchhoff's law of thermal radiation); hence clouds exchange thermal radiation between their bases and the underlying planetary surface (land or ocean) by absorbing and re-emitting this infrared radiation at the prevailing temperature – the lower the cloud base, the warmer the cloud particles and the higher the rate of emission. For a synthetic discussion of the impact of clouds (and in particular the role of cloud bases) on climate systems, see the
IPCC Third Assessment Report, in particular chapter 7.2. Cloud base is an important meteorological variable for aviation safety, as it determines whether pilots may use
visual flight rules (VFR) or
instrument flight rules for take-off and landing. ==See also==