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    Giant Tsunami-Shape Clouds Roll Across Alabama Sky

    For a morning, the sky looked like a surfer's dream: A series of huge breaking waves lined the horizon in Birmingham, Ala., on Friday (Dec. 16), their crests surging forward in slow motion. Amazed Alabamans took photos of the clouds and sent them to their local weather station, wondering, "What are these tsunamis in the sky?"

    Experts say the clouds were pristine examples of "Kelvin-Helmholtz waves." Whether seen in the sky or in the ocean, this type of turbulence always forms when a fast-moving layer of fluid slides on top of a slower, thicker layer, dragging its surface.

    Water waves, for example, form when the layer of fluid above them (i.e., the air) is moving faster than the layer of fluid below (i.e., the water). When the difference between the wind and water speed increases to a certain point, the waves "break" — their crests lurch forward — and they take on the telltale Kelvin-Helmholtz shape. [Astonishing Video Shows a Face in the Clouds]

    According to Chris Walcek, a meteorologist at the Atmospheric Sciences Research Center at the State University of New York, Albany, fast-moving air high in the sky can drag the top of slow-moving, thick clouds underneath it in much the same way.

    "In the pictures [of the Birmingham sky] there is probably a cold layer of air near the ground where the wind speed is probably low. That is why there is a cloud or fog in that layer," Walcek told Life's Little Mysteries, a sister site to LiveScience. "Over this cloudy, cold, slow-moving layer is probably a warmer and faster-moving layer of air."

    Most of the time, the difference in wind speed and temperature between two layers of the atmosphere is small, and so the fast-moving air on top "simply slides smoothly over the slower-moving air like a hockey puck sliding along an ice surface," Walcek said. At the other extreme, if the wind-speed difference is too large, the interface between the two layers breaks down into random turbulence.

    Kelvin-Helmholtz waves form when the difference in the temperature and wind speed of the two layers hits a sweet spot. "What [these pictures] show is air between these two atmospheric layers that is just very close to that threshold for turbulence, and mixing to mix the two layers together," he said.

    This story was provided by Life's Little Mysteries, a sister site to LiveScience. Follow Natalie Wolchover on Twitter @nattyover. Follow Life's Little Mysteries on Twitter @llmysteries, then join us on Facebook.

    What do you feel about this article?

     
    • DUMBERER67!  •  5 months ago
      once again nature provides the best art.
      • Alexis 5 months ago
        Incredible isn't it? What a great shot.

        Miss Alexis
      • O. 5 months ago
        It is Allah Who sends the winds which stir up clouds which He spreads about the sky however He wills. He forms them into dark clumps and you see the rain come pouring out from the middle of them. When He makes it fall on those of His servants He wills, they rejoice. (Quran, 30:48)

        Have you not seen how Allah makes the clouds move gently, then joins them together, then makes them into a stack, and then you see the rain come out of it.... ....And He sends down hail from mountains (clouds) in the sky, and He strikes with it whomever He wills, and turns it from whomever He wills. The vivid flash of its lightning nearly blinds the sight. (Quran, 24:43)

        And it is He Who sends the winds as heralds of glad tidings, going before His Mercy (rain). Till when they have carried a heavy-laden cloud, We drive it to a land that is dead, then We cause water (rain) to descend thereon. Then We produce every kind of fruit therewith. Similarly, We shall raise up the dead, so that you may remember or take heed.
        (QURAN, 7:57)

        And We send the winds fertilizing (to fill heavily the clouds with water), then cause the water (rain) to descend from the sky, and We give it to you to drink, and it is not you who are the owners of its stores [i.e. to give water to whom you like or to withhold it from whom you like].
        (Quran15:22)

        And thunder glorifies and praises Him, and so do the angels because of His Awe. He sends the thunderbolts, and therewith He strikes whom He wills, yet they (disbelievers) dispute about Allah. And He is Mighty in strength and Severe in punishment.
        (Quran 13:13)
      • Rob 5 months ago
        @ O. Dude, shut up.
    • get er done  •  5 months ago
      Now, that REALLY is cool. Great pics. Probably just as awsome to be there to see it in person.
    • Ryuk  •  5 months ago
      The pictures are amazing! (There is a link to them). I've never seen anything like that before.
      • Paul 5 months ago
        I have, but not this low.
      • shelly 5 months ago
        Just one of those would be terrifying but a row of them!
      • matthew 5 months ago
        As a Shinigami I'd think you'd have seen something like that before hahaha. In all seriousness they all look awesome.
    • Mary  •  Wichita, United States  •  5 months ago
      More interesting reading about this then reading about the Kardashians
      • righteousaurus 5 months ago
        The who?
      • Amy 5 months ago
        the 4 dislikes, maybe from the kardashians
      • oops 5 months ago
        then why did you even bring them up for???? loser
    • annedwards  •  5 months ago
      Super coool
    • Display Name  •  5 months ago
      That is hands down the coolest cloud formations my eyes have seen. Wish I could've been there.
    • None  •  5 months ago
      Just browsing the comments to see if anyone can turn article into a political debate. Did not see any, bravo!
    • fellow PND sufferer  •  Gainesville, United States  •  5 months ago
      That is beyond cool. Wish I could have seen it. Clouds rock.
      • lena 5 months ago
        i live there and i like looking at them too. that never happened down here in birmingham,al.
      • Heyward Shepherd 5 months ago
        Yes but if you're in Birmingham you know they do have a lot of interesting cloud activity on and around the mountains all the time. Best view for my was up at the Vulcan statue.
      • Kim Chee 5 months ago
        My breasts in your mouth will rock even more
    • William  •  O'neals, United States  •  5 months ago
      The best artwork is always found in nature!
    • Julie  •  Everett, United States  •  5 months ago
      Surfs up for the angels!
    • Who am I  •  5 months ago
      Totally cool picture!
    • Leo  •  Concord, United States  •  5 months ago
      Simply Amazing, God I Love Nature :)
    • Northfln8tive24  •  Davenport, United States  •  5 months ago
      looks like something from Whoville or Dr Suess
    • Doc  •  Utrecht, Netherlands  •  5 months ago
      Wow, that is just amazing!
    • joyce  •  Chico, United States  •  5 months ago
      I happen to think they look really cool, I'd be outside with my camera, no telling when you'll see that again.
    • 14NC  •  Gadsden, United States  •  5 months ago
      Sweet Home Alabama
    • r.c.  •  5 months ago
      Wow. I have never seen anything like that before.
    • jerry  •  Los Angeles, United States  •  5 months ago
      so spectacular
    • Robert  •  Swansboro, United States  •  5 months ago
      As a pilot I have many photos of fog doing that and other crazy things that couldn't be seen from the ground, as in these incredible photos. However, one early morning as I was driving near a large field I was amazed to see a small fog tonado! This is real Hand of God stuff, gotta love it!
    • Joseph  •  Phoenix, United States  •  5 months ago
      That's really cool!!!
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