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Introduction-The International Atlas of Clouds was produced as a result of long observations and it lists 10 cloud species, 14 cloud types, 9 cloud subtypes, 9 accessory clouds and their possible varieties. The Cloud Atlas contains the characteristic features of clouds, their height measured from the Earth’s surface, among others. The measured altitude values result from a great many instrumental measurements, so for the purposes of describing the height of a selected cloud species, the tables -due to the alterations of the volumes determining the atmosphere -contain not only one specific altitude value, but a series of values covering a wide range.
Stonawski, Tamas. 2016. \u201cMeasuring the Height of Clouds\u201d. Global Journal of Science Frontier Research - A: Physics & Space Science GJSFR-A Volume 15 (GJSFR Volume 15 Issue A8): .
Crossref Journal DOI 10.17406/GJSFR
Print ISSN 0975-5896
e-ISSN 2249-4626
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Total Score: 122
Country: Hungary
Subject: Global Journal of Science Frontier Research - A: Physics & Space Science
Authors: Stonawski, Tamas (PhD/Dr. count: 0)
View Count (all-time): 180
Total Views (Real + Logic): 4084
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Publish Date: 2016 01, Fri
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Introduction-The International Atlas of Clouds was produced as a result of long observations and it lists 10 cloud species, 14 cloud types, 9 cloud subtypes, 9 accessory clouds and their possible varieties. The Cloud Atlas contains the characteristic features of clouds, their height measured from the Earth’s surface, among others. The measured altitude values result from a great many instrumental measurements, so for the purposes of describing the height of a selected cloud species, the tables -due to the alterations of the volumes determining the atmosphere -contain not only one specific altitude value, but a series of values covering a wide range.
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