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The moon affects the tides, as clouds are water does the moon also affect them?

Often the waves will make ripples on the sand - and I have seen clouds take the same shape - any similarities?

2006-10-08 15:45:15 · 10 answers · asked by purity14kb 2 in Science & Mathematics Weather

10 answers

The gravity of the moon affects everything on earth - but for the most part it's so little that you don't notice it. (The tides is a well-known exception from this.) So, no - the moon doesn't affect the clouds in a noticable way.

The fact that the shape of the clouds sometimes looks similar to ripples in the sand is due to waves (just like the ripples in the sand!). The air in the atmosphere often has a wave-like motion due to uneven distribution of heat or as a result of passing over a mountain range.

2006-10-08 21:09:49 · answer #1 · answered by Barret 3 · 1 0

The moon does warp the upper atmosphere a bit, but effect on the clouds, no. About the ripples yes in some ways similar to wave ripples on sand but more related to current ripples in river sands. They are noticable mostly on high altitude shears, where the air at one level is moving under air at a higher level and creating eddies.

2006-10-08 15:52:11 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

the fast answer is: no. in spite of if, in case you prefer to stretch the belief to its extreme, 2 factors could be referred to a million) The moon (for style of 60 p.c.) and the solar (for style of 30 p.c.) exert a gravitational rigidity on earth that has effects on all fluids, the ambience coated. case in point, all of us understand that the ambience, alongside with the troposphere the place the climate occurs, is almost two times as extreme over the equator than the poles. The tropopause, that's the desirable of the troposphere the place the clouds are, is approximately 10 km over the poles and 18 km over the equator. this is using the lifting of robust equatorial convections and the centrifugal rigidity of the earth's rotation. it is hence thinkable that the moon and the solar does the same pull on the ambience in spite of if it would not extremely impact the formation of clouds that are the effects of the condensation of the adiabatic cooling with altitude 2) throughout a extreme rigidity, while the sky is sparkling and there is little wind, alongside a sea coast with reliable tidal contemporary, fog frequently varieties for the time of the summer season, by way of bringing of less warm offshore water in direction of the shore. The fog is, extremely, a cloud. one ought to then say that, in a roundabout way, the moon and its tidal pull is in charge for cloud formation in some particular areas.

2016-11-27 01:52:13 · answer #3 · answered by lebling 3 · 0 0

Hi. Not so much that you could possible notice. The actual mass of the water in clouds is low, the atmosphere also has low mass. The ripple you see in the clouds are a result of atmospheric instability. In the sand they are from water and are similar to dunes.

2006-10-08 15:50:23 · answer #4 · answered by Cirric 7 · 0 0

Yes.
The Moon's gravitational attraction is stronger on the side of Earth nearest to the Moon. Since Earth along with clouds and its oceans are not perfectly rigid, they are stretched along the line toward the Moon.The effect is much stronger in the oceans than in the clouds or solid crust so the water bulges are higher.

2006-10-08 18:57:30 · answer #5 · answered by Lutfor 3 · 0 0

The gravitational pull of the moon effects every thing on earth.
That would mean water and waves.
That would also mean the water in clouds.

2006-10-08 16:34:05 · answer #6 · answered by aiddogs5 4 · 0 0

Sorry. Except that everything is interrelated, I can't think of any observable effect from the moon on clouds except of course for the obvious. It makes them very beautiful!

2006-10-08 15:54:29 · answer #7 · answered by Kim 4 · 0 1

Yes

2006-10-08 16:28:26 · answer #8 · answered by scifuntubes 3 · 0 1

No it doesn't, check out some Astrology mags for more info. Bye

2006-10-08 19:04:14 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

yes it does

2006-10-09 11:43:26 · answer #10 · answered by Stan the man 7 · 0 1

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