, Guanajuato, Mexico. Towering cumulonimbus clouds are typically accompanied by smaller
cumulus clouds. The cumulonimbus
base may extend several kilometres (miles) across, or be as small as several tens of metres (yards) across, and occupy low to upper altitudes within the troposphere - formed at altitude from approximately . Normal peaks usually reach to as much as , with unusually high ones typically topping out around and extreme instances claimed to be as high as or more. Well-developed cumulonimbus clouds are characterized by a flat,
anvil shaped top (anvil dome), caused by
wind shear or
inversion at the
equilibrium level near the
tropopause. The shelf of the anvil may precede the main cloud's vertical component for many kilometres (miles), and be accompanied by lightning. Occasionally, rising air parcels surpass the equilibrium level (due to momentum) and form an
overshooting top culminating at the
maximum parcel level. When vertically developed, this largest of all clouds usually extends through all three cloud regions. Even the smallest cumulonimbus cloud dwarfs its neighbors in comparison.
Subtypes Species •
Cumulonimbus calvus: cloud with puffy top, similar to cumulus congestus which it develops from; under the correct conditions it can become a cumulonimbus capillatus. •
Cumulonimbus capillatus: cloud with cirrus-like, fibrous-edged top. File:Wagga-Cumulonimbus.jpg|Cumulonimbus calvus Storm cloud.jpg|A clearly developed cumulonimbus fibrous-edged top capillatus
Types •
Cumulonimbus flammagenitus (pyrocumulonimbus): rapidly growing cloud forming from non-atmospheric heat and condensation nuclei sources such as
wildfires and
volcanic eruptions.
Supplementary features Accessory clouds •
Arcus (including
roll and
shelf clouds): low, horizontal cloud formation associated with the leading edge of thunderstorm
outflow. •
Pannus: accompanied by a lower layer of fractus species cloud forming in precipitation. •
Pileus (species calvus only): small cap-like cloud over parent cumulonimbus. •
Velum: a thin horizontal sheet that forms around the middle of a cumulonimbus.
Supplementary features •
Incus (species capillatus only): cumulonimbus with flat anvil-like cirriform top caused by wind shear where the rising air currents hit the
inversion layer at the tropopause. • Mamma or
mammatus: consisting of bubble-like protrusions on the underside. • Tuba: column hanging from the cloud base which can develop into a
funnel cloud or tornado. They are known to drop very low, sometimes just above ground level. •
Virga: precipitation that evaporates before reaching the ground. File:Rolling-thunder-cloud.jpg|Arcus cloud (shelf cloud) leading a thunderstorm File:Fly00890 - Flickr - NOAA Photo Library.jpg|Incus with a velum edge File:Mammatus clouds regina sk june 2012.JPG|Mammatocumulus with drooping pouches File:Cumulonimbus tuba.jpg|A funnel cloud (tuba) over the Netherlands File:Anvil shaped cumulus panorama edit.jpg|Flanking line in front of a strong thunderstorm File:Cumulonimbus13 - NOAA.jpg|An overshooting top is a dome of clouds atop a cumulonimbus File:Cb virga 1.JPG|Rain evaporating before reaching the ground (virga) == Effects ==