Cumulus, Altocumulus, Cirrocumulus and Cirrus clouds photographed on a day with increasing wind strength. The weather pictures was taken on September 21, 2009, in the morning and just before noon local time in Odense city, Denmark.
Cirrocumulus cloud cover
In the image below taken at 9.40 AM local time, you see high altitude Cirrocumulus clouds. This is the type of cloud system that can display awesome patterns in the sky. One should think this kind of weather phenomenon is based on a vibration/frequency? According to NWS, this is the visualization of the chemical process where supercooled water is freezing to ice.
In the above photo, we are looking west. Wind speed is 7 mph in south south-west direction.
Altocumulus and Cirrocumulus cloud systems
In the image below taken at 9.41 AM local time, you see medium altitude Altocumulus to the mid-left in the photo and high altitude Cirrocumulus clouds covering the most of the upper photo…
In the above photo, we are looking south-west. Wind speed is 7 mph in south south-west direction.
Cumulus and Cirrocumulus clouds
In the image below taken at 11.23 AM local time, I believe we see the beginning of a Cirrus weather system. That is the splodge across the picture from top left to bottom right. These are high altitude clouds that in this situation looks more like the Cirrocumulus cloud type. The white clouds in the foreground are the ordinary low altitude Cumulus clouds.
In the above photo, we are looking west. Wind speed is 13 mph in west south-west direction.
From Cirrocumulus to Cirrus clouds?
In the image below taken 20 minutes later at 11.43 AM local time, we see the actual Cirrus clouds have formed. They are the long strokes you see behind the Cumulus clouds in the lower left side of the photo. The rest of the clouds in the photo seem to be high altitude Cirrocumulus and a few low altitude Cumulus clouds that rushes past.
In the above photo, we are looking west south-west. Wind speed is 15 mph in west south-west direction.
Photo gallery
See the weather history for Denmark (Vojens-Skrydstrup Air Base) on September 21, 2009
Camera used: Sony A-100 DSLR with a standard 18-75mm zoom lens
Related reading
- Aerodynamic contrails residues development
- Ordinary Cumulus clouds in the blue sky
- Heavy contrail weather and Sun halo photos
- Odd contrail-cloud (Sylph) development captured on photography
- Photogenic contrail dissolves in the sky above Denmark
Or go back to category Meteorology or homepage Real UFO pictures