![]() |
Odd cirrus this evening
This evening around sunset there was some odd-looking cirrus. The
oddity was that the curvature seemed to be in the vertical plane, not horizontal. I observed it over a period of 30 minutes from positions about 1km apart (home to get camera and out again to find a fairly clear horizon) and that impression persisted. Location East Cambridgeshire. https://www.flickr.com/photos/54731504@N04/31405011106 The whole scene reminded me of the visiting our open-hearth steelworks in Glasgow when I was an apprentice. Rivers of molten steel would run in channels across the floor! Any help with this would be appreciated. Mike |
Odd cirrus this evening
On 05/12/2016 19:16, Mike Causer wrote:
This evening around sunset there was some odd-looking cirrus. The oddity was that the curvature seemed to be in the vertical plane, not horizontal. I observed it over a period of 30 minutes from positions about 1km apart (home to get camera and out again to find a fairly clear horizon) and that impression persisted. Location East Cambridgeshire. https://www.flickr.com/photos/54731504@N04/31405011106 The whole scene reminded me of the visiting our open-hearth steelworks in Glasgow when I was an apprentice. Rivers of molten steel would run in channels across the floor! Any help with this would be appreciated. Mike Looks like it's a fallstreak hole, with the precipitation being blown by upper winds into that shape. I'm interested if anyone has a better explanation! |
Odd cirrus this evening
On Monday, 5 December 2016 22:24:15 UTC, Metman2012 wrote:
On 05/12/2016 19:16, Mike Causer wrote: This evening around sunset there was some odd-looking cirrus. The oddity was that the curvature seemed to be in the vertical plane, not horizontal. I observed it over a period of 30 minutes from positions about 1km apart (home to get camera and out again to find a fairly clear horizon) and that impression persisted. Location East Cambridgeshire. https://www.flickr.com/photos/54731504@N04/31405011106 The whole scene reminded me of the visiting our open-hearth steelworks in Glasgow when I was an apprentice. Rivers of molten steel would run in channels across the floor! Any help with this would be appreciated. Mike Looks like it's a fallstreak hole, with the precipitation being blown by upper winds into that shape. I'm interested if anyone has a better explanation! The obvious answer is: Has anyone thought to ask Dawlish. No? Baa! |
Odd cirrus this evening
On Mon, 5 Dec 2016 19:16:07 +0000
Mike Causer wrote: This evening around sunset there was some odd-looking cirrus. The oddity was that the curvature seemed to be in the vertical plane, not horizontal. I observed it over a period of 30 minutes from positions about 1km apart (home to get camera and out again to find a fairly clear horizon) and that impression persisted. Location East Cambridgeshire. https://www.flickr.com/photos/54731504@N04/31405011106 That cirrus is perfectly normal; the curvature always occurs in the vertical due to the ice crystals falling through layers of air having differing wind velocities. -- Graham P Davis, Bracknell, Berks. [Retd meteorologist/programmer] Web-site: http://www.scarlet-jade.com/ There are more fools than knaves in the world, else the knaves would not have enough to live upon. [Samuel Butler] |
Odd cirrus this evening
On Tue, 6 Dec 2016 15:02:48 +0000
Graham P Davis wrote: That cirrus is perfectly normal; the curvature always occurs in the vertical due to the ice crystals falling through layers of air having differing wind velocities. Thank you. I must have never seen it so pronounced before. Mike |
All times are GMT. The time now is 02:12 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2006 WeatherBanter.co.uk