Chris,
Thank you very much.
I don't know these. You have teached me so much, thank you very much :-)
--
Michael
An Olympus OM system fans
2007/5/29, Chris Barker <ftog@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>:
>
> The sky looks great (again ...). I wouldn't have called it a "sea of
> cloud", Michael, mainly because it is too broken to look like a sea.
> If it were a sheet of Stratus or Stratocumulus it might look like a
> "sea".
>
> In case you are interested, the high cloud is called Cirrus ("CI").
> Since this example is in a sheet or layer of high cloud it is called
> Cirrostratus ("CS"); I should guess that it is up at around 25 -
> 30,000feet. The lower cloud is called Cumulus (CU), also called
> "Fluffy Cu", or "Fair Weather Cu" by aviators. The tops of the
> Cumulus will be at around 6 - 8,000feet, at a guess. So your
> aircraft must have been at 10 - 15,000feet when you took the photo,
> although I realise that weather conditions in your part of the world
> produce much higher piles of Cumulus, especially when they turn into
> thunderstorms or Cumulonimbus (CB).
>
> Chris
>
> On 29 May 2007, at 11:28, Michael Wong wrote:
>
> > A shot in aeroplane of the journey from Hong Kong to Hainan.
> >
> > I don't know how to call the scene but in Chinese to translate to
> > English means "The sea of cloud".
> >
> > Very beautiful, it was pity the time at noon. If the flight was at
> > morning or evening I think it will be more attractive.
> >
> >
> > OM-4T Black, Zuiko 35-80mm F2.8 ED, Kodak E100vs, Nikon CoolScan IV ED
> >
> > http://palmboy.palmcyber.net/albums/album01/IMG2212.jpg
>
>
>
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