- Cloud cover
-
Part of the Nature series on
WeatherCalendar seasons Spring · Summer
Tropical seasonsStorms Thunderstorm · Supercell
Downburst · Lightning
Tornado · Waterspout
Tropical cyclone (Hurricane)
Extratropical cyclone
Winter storm · Blizzard · Ice storm
Dust storm · Firestorm · CloudPrecipitation Drizzle · Rain · Snow · Graupel
Freezing rain · Ice pellets · HailTopics Meteorology · Climate
Weather forecasting
Heat wave · Air pollutionWeather portal Cloud cover (also known as cloudiness, cloudage or cloud amount) refers to the fraction of the sky obscured by clouds when observed from a particular location. A planet completely surrounded by cloud cover would become an arctic wasteland while a planet without cloud cover would become a waterless desert where even reptiles are incapable of surviving and thriving (due to an excessive amount of greenhouse gasses and solar radiation that would develop).[1][2]
Contents
Role in the climate system
-
Satellite image based largely on observations from NASA's Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on July 11, 2005 of Earth's cloud cover.
Clouds play multiple critical roles in the climate system. In particular, being bright objects in the visible part of the solar spectrum, they efficiently reflect light to space and thus contribute to the cooling of the planet. A small increase in cloud cover could, in principle, balance the heating resulting from greenhouse gases (though this may have other implications as well).
See climate change for a more detailed discussion of these issues.
See also
Okta, a unit of measurement used to describe cloud cover.
References
- Huschke, Ralph E. (1959) Glossary of Meteorology, American Meteorological Society, Boston, Second printing-1970.
- McIntosh, D. H. (1972) Meteorological Glossary, Her Majesty's Stationery Office, Met. O. 842, A.P. 897, 319 p.
- IPCC Third Assessment Report, has extensive coverage of cloud-climate interactions: See, in particular, chapter 7.2.
External links
- NSDL.arm.gov, Glossary of Atmospheric Terms, From the National Science Digital Library's Atmospheric Visualization Collection.
- Earthobersvatory.nasa.gov, Monthly maps of global cloud cover from NASA's Earth Observatory
Categories:- Clouds
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.