Wednesday, February 25, 2015

TIMELAPSE: Rare Hole Punch Clouds Drift Over Spokane, Wash., at Sunset

By Rachelle Gaynor, AccuWeather.com Staff Writer
February 25,2015; 10:22PM,EST
 
 
See larger image below.
Residents in Spokane, Washington, recently caught sight of the unique phenomenon known as "hole punch" clouds that cause a gaping hole in the otherwise cloudy sky.
Also referred to as a fallstreak cloud, the cutout is formed after an airplane flies through a cooler, cloudy region and leaves behind a trail of ice crystals.
With a water cloud at a mid-level of about 10,000 feet, the plane flying overhead will leave a condensation trail that produces ice crystals. When the right conditions mix, the ice crystals will grow as they gather moisture from surrounding water droplets.
Spokane, Wash., Feb. 18, 2015. (Twitter Photo/Jonathan Fox, NWS employee)
"The ice crystals eat away at the water droplets," AccuWeather.com Meteorologist Mark Mancuso said.
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As ice crystals grow, they become heavier and begin to fall, creating the gaping hole. Mancuso added that it can take hours for the hole to form after an plane moves through.
In the following timelapse released by the National Weather Service on Feb. 23, 2015, the hole punch cloud can be seen from above (look on the left side of the video).





ICYMI: these rare "hole punch clouds" showed up in B.C. recently. @KGordonGlobalBC explains: glbn.ca/JEQjg pic.twitter.com/FhfC5MfqMV
#ICYMI: "Hole-punch" or "Fallstreak" clouds in #Spokane via @KrisCrockerKXLY @kxly4news #WAwx pic.twitter.com/sjYFODDEkA
 

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