topography

Pakistan
October 4, 2006 5:20am CST
Topography forced lifting by the surface of the earth Air is also lifted by the earth itself. When air encounters a mountain range, for example, air is forced to rise up and over the mountains and if enough lifting occurs, water vapor condenses to produce orographic clouds. In the United States, the prevailing winds are generally from west to east, so most orographic clouds form on the western side of a mountain. Topography forced lifting by the surface of the earth Air is also lifted by the earth itself. When air encounters a mountain range, for example, air is forced to rise up and over the mountains and if enough lifting occurs, water vapor condenses to produce orographic clouds. In the United States, the prevailing winds are generally from west to east, so most orographic clouds form on the western side of a mountain. Why do orographic clouds appear to be stationary? Air rises on a mountain's windward (upwind) side and sinks on the lee (downwind) side. This sinking motion warms the air and causes the cloud to evaporate, destroying the cloud. Therefore, even though the wind blows over the mountain, condensation processes and associated cloud droplets are confined to the windward side. This is why orographic clouds begin on the windward side of the mountain and end near the summit. The Rocky and the Sierra-Nevada Mountains are examples of mountain ranges that produce orographic clouds. The large dark cloud in the upper right-hand corner of the picture above and the smaller cloud just above the mountain are both examples of orographic clouds. Why do orographic clouds appear to be stationary? Air rises on a mountain's windward (upwind) side and sinks on the lee (downwind) side. This sinking motion warms the air and causes the cloud to evaporate, destroying the cloud. Therefore, even though the wind blows over the mountain, condensation processes and associated cloud droplets are confined to the windward side. This is why orographic clouds begin on the windward side of the mountain and end near the summit. The Rocky and the Sierra-Nevada Mountains are examples of mountain ranges that produce orographic clouds. The large dark cloud in the upper right-hand corner of the picture above and the smaller cloud just above the mountain are both examples of orographic clouds. ________________________________________
1 response
@vipul20044 (5793)
• India
14 Oct 06
Hey thanks for the information but tell me according to your line "The large dark cloud in the upper right-hand corner of the picture above " Where is the picture?
1 person likes this
• Pakistan
16 Oct 06
i m sorry that i could not downlowds the pictures of dark clouds. if u have any problem let me know . i will solve ur problem...... thank u for comments...