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uk.sci.weather (UK Weather) (uk.sci.weather) For the discussion of daily weather events, chiefly affecting the UK and adjacent parts of Europe, both past and predicted. The discussion is open to all, but contributions on a practical scientific level are encouraged. |
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#1
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Further to the question about the CB cloud over Kent which could be
seen from near Heathrow, what's the furthest that CBs at our latitudes can be seen? In 2001 I saw two CBs that were apparently hundreds of miles away. Over the August bank holiday I saw a CB from the South Downs (South Harting near Petersfield) on the northern horizon which didn't look too distant (I guessed London) but apparently it was over Norfolk, 200-odd miles away. IIRC the date was 25th August (Saturday). Further still I saw a very distant CB on the southern horizon from the New Forest, the same summer. I remember looking at a lightning chart for that day and the nearest was apparently in the Rennes/Nantes area of western France, even further, 200 to 300 miles south? The date was, IIRC, 26th July (Thursday). Both occasions were very hot, humid, and sunny with no clouds apart from these very isolated CBs. Nick |
#2
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![]() wrote in message oups.com... Further to the question about the CB cloud over Kent which could be seen from near Heathrow, what's the furthest that CBs at our latitudes can be seen? In 2001 I saw two CBs that were apparently hundreds of miles away. Over the August bank holiday I saw a CB from the South Downs (South Harting near Petersfield) on the northern horizon which didn't look too distant (I guessed London) but apparently it was over Norfolk, 200-odd miles away. IIRC the date was 25th August (Saturday). Further still I saw a very distant CB on the southern horizon from the New Forest, the same summer. I remember looking at a lightning chart for that day and the nearest was apparently in the Rennes/Nantes area of western France, even further, 200 to 300 miles south? The date was, IIRC, 26th July (Thursday). Both occasions were very hot, humid, and sunny with no clouds apart from these very isolated CBs. Nick Summer is the time when you see CBs at a greater distance due to their larger height. Some CBs can touch 40,000ft in the height of summer in air masses with high tropopauses. Conversely, in winter, CB tops in a northerly can be as low as 8000ft. Think of Pythagoras' Theorem. I remember this subject coming up before, I'd try Google Groups. Joe |
#3
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![]() wrote in message oups.com... Further to the question about the CB cloud over Kent which could be seen from near Heathrow, what's the furthest that CBs at our latitudes can be seen? In 2001 I saw two CBs that were apparently hundreds of miles away. Over the August bank holiday I saw a CB from the South Downs (South Harting near Petersfield) on the northern horizon which didn't look too distant (I guessed London) but apparently it was over Norfolk, 200-odd miles away. IIRC the date was 25th August (Saturday). Further still I saw a very distant CB on the southern horizon from the New Forest, the same summer. I remember looking at a lightning chart for that day and the nearest was apparently in the Rennes/Nantes area of western France, even further, 200 to 300 miles south? The date was, IIRC, 26th July (Thursday). Both occasions were very hot, humid, and sunny with no clouds apart from these very isolated CBs. Nick Summer is the time when you see CBs at a greater distance due to their larger height. Some CBs can touch 40,000ft in the height of summer in air masses with high tropopauses. Conversely, in winter, CB tops in a northerly can be as low as 8000ft. Think of Pythagoras' Theorem. I remember this subject coming up before, I'd try Google Groups. Joe |
#4
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![]() wrote in message oups.com... Further to the question about the CB cloud over Kent which could be seen from near Heathrow, what's the furthest that CBs at our latitudes can be seen? In 2001 I saw two CBs that were apparently hundreds of miles away. Over the August bank holiday I saw a CB from the South Downs (South Harting near Petersfield) on the northern horizon which didn't look too distant (I guessed London) but apparently it was over Norfolk, 200-odd miles away. IIRC the date was 25th August (Saturday). Further still I saw a very distant CB on the southern horizon from the New Forest, the same summer. I remember looking at a lightning chart for that day and the nearest was apparently in the Rennes/Nantes area of western France, even further, 200 to 300 miles south? The date was, IIRC, 26th July (Thursday). Both occasions were very hot, humid, and sunny with no clouds apart from these very isolated CBs. Nick Summer is the time when you see CBs at a greater distance due to their larger height. Some CBs can touch 40,000ft in the height of summer in air masses with high tropopauses. Conversely, in winter, CB tops in a northerly can be as low as 8000ft. Think of Pythagoras' Theorem. I remember this subject coming up before, I'd try Google Groups. Joe |
#5
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Joe Hunt wrote:
wrote in message oups.com... Further to the question about the CB cloud over Kent which could be seen from near Heathrow, what's the furthest that CBs at our latitudes can be seen? Summer is the time when you see CBs at a greater distance due to their larger height. Some CBs can touch 40,000ft in the height of summer in air masses with high tropopauses. Conversely, in winter, CB tops in a northerly can be as low as 8000ft. Think of Pythagoras' Theorem. Not the same, but a friend living beneath a (stratospheric) flight path timed passenger jets from the moment they flew overhead to the point at which he lost sight of them, rather above the horizon still, and guestimated 230 miles based on their probable speed. Not that this provides much guidance for far more visible cumulonimbus cloud tops. |
#6
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Joe Hunt wrote:
wrote in message oups.com... Further to the question about the CB cloud over Kent which could be seen from near Heathrow, what's the furthest that CBs at our latitudes can be seen? Summer is the time when you see CBs at a greater distance due to their larger height. Some CBs can touch 40,000ft in the height of summer in air masses with high tropopauses. Conversely, in winter, CB tops in a northerly can be as low as 8000ft. Think of Pythagoras' Theorem. Not the same, but a friend living beneath a (stratospheric) flight path timed passenger jets from the moment they flew overhead to the point at which he lost sight of them, rather above the horizon still, and guestimated 230 miles based on their probable speed. Not that this provides much guidance for far more visible cumulonimbus cloud tops. |
#7
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Joe Hunt wrote:
wrote in message oups.com... Further to the question about the CB cloud over Kent which could be seen from near Heathrow, what's the furthest that CBs at our latitudes can be seen? Summer is the time when you see CBs at a greater distance due to their larger height. Some CBs can touch 40,000ft in the height of summer in air masses with high tropopauses. Conversely, in winter, CB tops in a northerly can be as low as 8000ft. Think of Pythagoras' Theorem. Not the same, but a friend living beneath a (stratospheric) flight path timed passenger jets from the moment they flew overhead to the point at which he lost sight of them, rather above the horizon still, and guestimated 230 miles based on their probable speed. Not that this provides much guidance for far more visible cumulonimbus cloud tops. |
#8
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![]() "Joe Hunt" wrote in message ... wrote in message oups.com... Further to the question about the CB cloud over Kent which could be seen from near Heathrow, what's the furthest that CBs at our latitudes can be seen? In 2001 I saw two CBs that were apparently hundreds of miles away. Over the August bank holiday I saw a CB from the South Downs (South Harting near Petersfield) on the northern horizon which didn't look too distant (I guessed London) but apparently it was over Norfolk, 200-odd miles away. IIRC the date was 25th August (Saturday). Further still I saw a very distant CB on the southern horizon from the New Forest, the same summer. I remember looking at a lightning chart for that day and the nearest was apparently in the Rennes/Nantes area of western France, even further, 200 to 300 miles south? The date was, IIRC, 26th July (Thursday). Both occasions were very hot, humid, and sunny with no clouds apart from these very isolated CBs. Nick Summer is the time when you see CBs at a greater distance due to their larger height. Some CBs can touch 40,000ft in the height of summer in air masses with high tropopauses. Conversely, in winter, CB tops in a northerly can be as low as 8000ft. Think of Pythagoras' Theorem. I remember this subject coming up before, I'd try Google Groups. Joe The distance to the horizon from an observer increases roughly with the square root of the observer's height above sea level. For an observer at an altitude of 1,000 ft, I think the horizon is about 40 miles away, and for an observer at 4,000 ft, the horizon is 80 miles away, and so on. The same formula applies to the height at which distant objects can be visible above the horizon. Therefore (given sufficiently clear air of course) the top of a cloud over 16,000 ft in height could be visible to an observer at sea level at a distance of 160 miles. A couple of years ago I was on holiday in El Hierro and Mt Tiede on Tenerife was continually and very clearly visible at a distance of about 100 miles. Regards, Roger |
#9
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![]() "Joe Hunt" wrote in message ... wrote in message oups.com... Further to the question about the CB cloud over Kent which could be seen from near Heathrow, what's the furthest that CBs at our latitudes can be seen? In 2001 I saw two CBs that were apparently hundreds of miles away. Over the August bank holiday I saw a CB from the South Downs (South Harting near Petersfield) on the northern horizon which didn't look too distant (I guessed London) but apparently it was over Norfolk, 200-odd miles away. IIRC the date was 25th August (Saturday). Further still I saw a very distant CB on the southern horizon from the New Forest, the same summer. I remember looking at a lightning chart for that day and the nearest was apparently in the Rennes/Nantes area of western France, even further, 200 to 300 miles south? The date was, IIRC, 26th July (Thursday). Both occasions were very hot, humid, and sunny with no clouds apart from these very isolated CBs. Nick Summer is the time when you see CBs at a greater distance due to their larger height. Some CBs can touch 40,000ft in the height of summer in air masses with high tropopauses. Conversely, in winter, CB tops in a northerly can be as low as 8000ft. Think of Pythagoras' Theorem. I remember this subject coming up before, I'd try Google Groups. Joe The distance to the horizon from an observer increases roughly with the square root of the observer's height above sea level. For an observer at an altitude of 1,000 ft, I think the horizon is about 40 miles away, and for an observer at 4,000 ft, the horizon is 80 miles away, and so on. The same formula applies to the height at which distant objects can be visible above the horizon. Therefore (given sufficiently clear air of course) the top of a cloud over 16,000 ft in height could be visible to an observer at sea level at a distance of 160 miles. A couple of years ago I was on holiday in El Hierro and Mt Tiede on Tenerife was continually and very clearly visible at a distance of about 100 miles. Regards, Roger |
#10
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![]() "Joe Hunt" wrote in message ... wrote in message oups.com... Further to the question about the CB cloud over Kent which could be seen from near Heathrow, what's the furthest that CBs at our latitudes can be seen? In 2001 I saw two CBs that were apparently hundreds of miles away. Over the August bank holiday I saw a CB from the South Downs (South Harting near Petersfield) on the northern horizon which didn't look too distant (I guessed London) but apparently it was over Norfolk, 200-odd miles away. IIRC the date was 25th August (Saturday). Further still I saw a very distant CB on the southern horizon from the New Forest, the same summer. I remember looking at a lightning chart for that day and the nearest was apparently in the Rennes/Nantes area of western France, even further, 200 to 300 miles south? The date was, IIRC, 26th July (Thursday). Both occasions were very hot, humid, and sunny with no clouds apart from these very isolated CBs. Nick Summer is the time when you see CBs at a greater distance due to their larger height. Some CBs can touch 40,000ft in the height of summer in air masses with high tropopauses. Conversely, in winter, CB tops in a northerly can be as low as 8000ft. Think of Pythagoras' Theorem. I remember this subject coming up before, I'd try Google Groups. Joe The distance to the horizon from an observer increases roughly with the square root of the observer's height above sea level. For an observer at an altitude of 1,000 ft, I think the horizon is about 40 miles away, and for an observer at 4,000 ft, the horizon is 80 miles away, and so on. The same formula applies to the height at which distant objects can be visible above the horizon. Therefore (given sufficiently clear air of course) the top of a cloud over 16,000 ft in height could be visible to an observer at sea level at a distance of 160 miles. A couple of years ago I was on holiday in El Hierro and Mt Tiede on Tenerife was continually and very clearly visible at a distance of about 100 miles. Regards, Roger |
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