CL9 Cumulonimbus with anvil

Click the small image for full size version.

Gallery
eg1
© P.H. Jeffries
eg2
© J.F.P. Galvin
eg3
© N. Elkins
eg4
© G.A. Watt
eg5
© R.K. Pilsbury
eg6
© R.D. Whyman
eg7
© C.S. Broomfield
eg8
© R.K. Pilsbury

The characteristic shape of these clouds can only be seen as a whole when viewed from a distance (top photographs). The tops of these massive clouds show a fibrous or striated structure that frequently resembles an anvil (2nd row left), plume or huge mass of hair (2nd row right). They may occur as an isolated cloud or an extensive wall (3rd row left) and squalls, hail and/or thunder often accompany them.

Underneath the base, which is often very dark, pannus clouds CL7 frequently form and, in storms, these may be only a few hundred feet above the earth's surface and they can merge to form a continuous layer. There may be rugged cumulus (3rd row right) or a dense horizontal roll at the shower's edge. Mamma may form, especially on the underside of the projecting anvil (bottom left) and may appear particularly prominent when the sun is low in the sky. Virga may often be seen (bottom right). A whole variety of other clouds such as dense cirrus, altocumulus, altostratus, stratocumulus, cumulus and stratus may also be present.

If the cumulonimbus passes nearly or directly overhead, the characteristic top is lost to view. Consequently an observer, seeing only the under surface, may confuse it with nimbostratus, if a watch has not been kept on the sky. By convention, the cloud is reported as cumulonimbus if accompanied by lightning, thunder, hail or other precipitation of a showery nature. CL9 is used when it is impossible to differentiate between CL3 and CL9. Cumulonimbus most frequently develops from large cumulus CL2. They sometimes develop from altocumulus castellanus CM8, when the base is unusually high and can be embedded in altostratus or nimbostratus. Cumulonimbus can disintegrate into dense cirrus CH3.

Classification
Description:
Cumulonimbus the upper part of which is clearly fibrous often in the shape of an anvil.
Designation:
CL=9 (C9)
Latin name:
Cumulonimbus capillatus (Cb cap).

Related pages: Cloud classification | CL guide | CM guide | CH guide | Cloud index