Home > Info-pedia

Info-pedia / 06 Mar 2024

Info Pedia : Cavum Clouds

image

Context: NASA’s Terra satellite captured a cluster of cavum clouds over the Gulf of Mexico off Florida’s west coast.

 

About the Cavum Clouds

  • These clouds appear as if a large circle or ellipse has been neatly cut from the clouds, leaving feathery wisps in the middle of the hole.
  • They are also known as hole-punch clouds or fallstreak holes.
  • These are a testament to the intricate and dynamic processes that occur in our atmosphere.

Formation:

  • Cavum clouds are formed when aeroplanes fly through banks of altocumulus clouds, mid-level clouds that contain supercooled water droplets.
  • As air moves around the plane, a process called adiabatic expansion can make the droplets freeze into ice crystals.
  • The ice crystals eventually grow heavy and fall out of the sky, leaving a hole in the cloud layer.
  • The falling ice crystals are visible in the centre of the holes as wispy trails of precipitation that never reach the ground – features called virga.