Mushrooms & Flying Saucers
Lenticularis often shows iridescence if it is near or in front of the sun. Bright colors (called irisation) are sometimes seen along the edge of lenticular clouds...
The Cloud Cap
Cap cloud or cloud cap is a stratiform, orographic cloud that hovers above or over an isolated mountain peak, formed by the cooling and condensation of moist air forced up and over the peak and lenticularly shaped by horizontal upper level winds. The cloud appears to remain essentially stationary.The term is also occasionally used for Pileus (Latin for cap) cloud. Unlike the mountain cap cloud, the pileus is essentially an accessory cloud, that appears as a smooth cap, or hood above a cumulus or cumulonimbus cloud. The cap forms when a humid layer is lifted to its dew point above a rising thermal. This may later penetrate the pileus, which will eventually be absorbed into the main cloud body. Sometimes several layers of pileus form above one another.
The Shadow
A cloud shadow occurring at sunset is formed when light is cast from a low level cloud onto a higher level cloud. During a sunset, the sun's rays will sometimes be blocked by a cumulus cloud below the horizon. Like any shadow, a darkened area will form. These types of cloud shadows are especially dramatic and can appear as darkened rays of light, sometimes referred to as crepuscular rays, as they appear in the same direction as the setting sun.Sources
- "Boulder’s Uplifting Lennies". WordPress. Retrieved from http://richwolf.wordpress.com/2010/12/09/boulders-uplifting-lennies/ (23 October 2013).
- "Cap cloud". Weather Online. Retrieved from http://www.weatheronline.co.uk/reports/wxfacts/Cap-cloud.htm (23 October 2013).
- "Lenticular cloud". Wikipedia. Retrieved from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lenticular_cloud (23 October 2013).
- "Lenticularis" by Harald EDENS. Weatherscapes.com. Retrieved from http://www.weatherscapes.com/album.php?cat=clouds&subcat=lenticularis (23 October 2013).
- "What Is a Cloud Shadow?" by Rachelle OBLACK. About.com. Retrieved from http://weather.about.com/od/cloudsandprecipitation/ss/cloud_shadows.htm (23 October 2013).