Tuesday, November 3, 2015

Kelvin-Helmoltz Clouds: Rolling Waves in the Sky (PHOTOS)

Chris Dolce
Published: November 3,2015





 
Clouds resembling breaking ocean waves appeared in the skies above Breckenridge, Colorado, in the final week of October.
The rolling, wave-like cloud formations are called Kelvin-Helmoltz clouds. Sometimes they are also called billows. They are named for scientists Lord Kelvin and Hermann von Helmholtz, who discovered the process by which they form.
"They are the atmospheric equivalent of those great breaking waves that you sometimes see on the ocean," says Dr. Greg Forbes of The Weather Channel.
These breaking atmospheric waves occur in an environment with a large amount of vertical wind shear and stable air. Wind shear is a change in the speed and direction of winds as you go higher in the atmosphere.
In this case, winds at the top of the cloud layer are moving faster than the base of that same layer. This causes the top to crash downwards in a curling manner after it hits the stable layer above.
The rolling motion created by this type of wind shear also causes turbulence for aircraft.
However, the rolling clouds motions are often masked by a large amount of cloud cover. Other times, there are no clouds around to illustrate the wave pattern.

MORE: Hole-Punch Clouds

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