Undulatus asperatus (or
alternately, asperatus) is a cloud formation, proposed in 2009
as a separate cloud classification by the founder of the Cloud
Appreciation Society. If successful it will be the first cloud formation added since cirrus
intortus in 1951 to the International Cloud Atlas of
the World Meteorological Organization. The name translates
approximately as roughened or agitated waves.
Margaret LeMone, a cloud expert with
the National Center for Atmospheric Research has taken photos of
asperatus clouds for 30 years, and considers it a likely new cloud
type. On June 20, 2006 Jane Wiggins took a picture of asperatus clouds
from the window of a downtown office building in Cedar Rapids,
Iowa. In March 2009, Chad Hedstroom took a picture of asperatus clouds from
his car near Greenville Ave in Dallas, Texas. Soon after taking it,
Wiggins sent her Cedar Rapids image to the Cloud Appreciation Society,
which displayed it on its image gallery. Since 2006, many similar cloud
formations have been contributed to the gallery, and in 2009 Gavin
Pretor-Pinney, founder of The Cloud Appreciation Society, began working with
the Royal Meteorological Society to promote the cloud
type. Wiggins' photograph was posted on the National
Geographic website on June 4, 2009. The clouds are most closely related
to undulatus clouds. Although they appear dark and storm-like,
they tend to dissipate without a storm forming. The ominous-looking clouds
have been particularly common in the Plains states of the United
States, often during the morning or midday hours following convective
thunderstorm activity. As of June 2009 the Royal Meteorological
Society is gathering evidence of the type of weather patterns in which
undulatus asperatus clouds appear, so as to study how they form and decide
whether they are distinct from other undulatus clouds.
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