" Ya.. Allah.., berilah hidayat, hifazat dan maghfirahMu kepada pemimpin kami Imam Mahadi Al-Muntazar walau di mana baginda berada. Selamatkanlah baginda, bantulah baginda, begitu juga para pejuang Islam yang akan bergadai nyawa di sisinya. Ya.. Allah.., selamatkanlah seramai mungkin umat ini dari fitnah dan sihir Dajjal. Ya.. Allah.., bantulah kami menghadapi gelombang-gelombang ujian yang bakal mendatang "
INFO TERKINI GEMPA BUMI SABTU 3 MARCH 2012
8.20 pm - Gempa bumi kuat bermagnitud 6.7 skala Richter telah berlaku di Tenggara Kepulauan Loyalty. Pusat gempa bumi tersebut terletak di latitud 22.1 Selatan longitud 170.5 Timur - 6403km Tenggara Tawau, Sabah :- JMM
PRO REFORM VIDEO - Piring Terbang..?
14 February 2010
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
HIMPUNAN ARTIKEL-ARTIKEL SEBELUMNYA
-
▼
2010
(601)
-
▼
February
(48)
- MALAPETAKA SEMAKIN MENDATANG
- IMEJ MISTERI UNTUK DIKONGSI (28/02/2010)
- Gambar Untuk Dikongsi Bersama 25 Feb 2010
- Mahkamah Tolak Semakan Keputusan Peroleh Bahan Bukti
- Gambar Untuk Dikongsi Bersama 24 Feb 2010
- Polis Siasat Pemimpin Pakatan Rakyat
- Gambar Untuk Dikongsi Bersama 23 Feb 2010
- Wartawan Kanan India Persoal Perbicaraan Anwar
- Mengapa Ahli Parlimen Australia Bantah Malaysia?
- Amaran Anwar: Rakyat Akan Tolak BN
- AMK S'gor Saran Rumah Untuk Generasi Muda
- Gambar Untuk Dikongsi Bersama 20 Feb 2010
- Mac 1 Peluang Baru MP Zul Hadap Lembaga Disiplin
- Syed Husin: PKR Tidak Tahu Zulkifli Ke Korea
- Serangan BN Bukti PR Semakin Kuat
- Gambar Untuk Dikongsi Bersama 16 Feb 2010
- Gambar Untuk Dikongsi Bersama 13 Feb 2010
- Zahrain Tiada Sokongan Ahli Akar Umbi
- Ancaman Buruk Jika Osama Dibunuh
- DSAI: Perutusan Tahun Baru Cina 2010
- Kenyataan Media AMK Cabang Bayan Baru
- Gambar Untuk Dikongsi Bersama 11 Feb 2010
- Boleh Singkir PM Tanpa Undi Tidak Percaya
- Taktik Tiga Serampang Umno Pecahkan PR
- Kes Fitnah 2 Terhadap DSAI
- Seterusnya Hantar Anwar Ke Penjara?
- Gambar Untuk Dikongsi Bersama 09 Feb 2010
- Mahkamah Persekutuan Kekal Zambry
- Solidariti Kepada Anwar Tetap Utuh
- Gambar Untuk Dikongsi Bersama 07 Feb 2010
- Gambar Untuk Dikongsi Bersama 06 Feb 2010
- Guan Eng Bidas Pihak Yang Tuduh Melayu PP Disisih
- FRU Siap Sedia
- Gambar Untuk Dikongsi Bersama 04 Feb 2010
- Perkembangan Kes Fitnah 2 Terhadap DSAI
- Perbicaraan Anwar, Najib Dan Maruah Malaysia
- Gambar Untuk Dikongsi Bersama 03 Feb 2010
- Konspirasi 2: Fakta-Fakta & Bukti Yang Perlu Diren...
- Gambar Untuk Dikongsi Bersama 02 Feb 2010 (update)
- Munawar : Kenapa Institusi Kehakiman Malaysia Meng...
- Rakaman Sidang Media DSAI Di Mahkamah
- Anwar Mahu Sapena Najib dan Rosmah Sebagai Saksi
- Gambar Untuk Dikongsi Bersama 01 Feb 2010
- PKR Selangor Tetap Sokong Kepimpinan Guan Eng
- Majlis Tertinggi SUPP Sertai PR
- Kepada Semua Ahli AIC Dan Pendokong REFORMASI
- SMS Ajak Azan Sertai UMNO
- PR Anjur Dialog Antara Agama
-
▼
February
(48)
2 comments:
what are the hell is that?Just a cloud picture!!!!!!? Write something bro..let the reader know your story
Low Clouds ( Awan Rendah )
Type 1 (cumulus of little vertical extent):
Cumulus clouds are very common, especially in warm and moist climates. In the Keys, cumulus clouds are usually based between 1,500 feet and 3,500 feet above ground, and can occur at any time of year. Type 1 cumulus clouds are flat and thin in appearance, and indicate that the air that is rising to form them is not able to rise very far. Most of the time this is because there is insufficient heating/lifting or moisture to cause deeper (taller) cloud development. These clouds are too thin to produce rain, lightning, or waterspouts.
Type 2 (cumulus of moderate/strong vertical extent, or towering cumulus [TCU]):
Type 2 cumulus are formed by the same processes as type 1, except that there is a deeper layer in which heating/lifting and moisture are sufficient to promote cloud development, and thus the resulting clouds are taller. In the Keys, type 2 cumulus can occur at any time of year, and are very common in the Summer. When a cumulus cloud is much taller than it is wide, it is often called a towering cumulus (TCU) cloud. The taller these clouds are, the more likely they are to produce showers, and sometimes waterspouts. A TCU producing a shower is shown in the third picture below.
Type 3 (cumulonimbus [CB] whose tops are not fibrous or in the form of an anvil):
Cumulonimbus (CB) clouds are very large, tall, billowing cumulus clouds, sometimes referred to as thunderheads. They often produce lightning, thunder, rain, sometimes waterspouts, and on rare occasions severe weather such as hail, high winds, or tornadoes. In the Keys, CB can occur at any time of year, but are much more common in the Summer months (June through September) than the Winter months (December through February), because they usually need a very deep layer of warm, moist, rising air in order to form. CB can occur in Summer under a wide variety of conditions, but in the Winter are usually caused by cold fronts moving into warm, humid air. In the Keys, CB are usually based less than 2,000 feet above ground in the Summer, and sometimes slightly higher in the Winter. Type 3 CB are generally puffy and billowy on top, sometimes resembling the head of a cauliflower.
Type 4 (stratocumulus [SC] formed by the spreading/flattening of cumulus):
Stratocumulus (SC) clouds can form at any time of year in the Keys, and under a variety of conditions, but are most common during Winter and Spring. They are not as puffy or sharp-edged as cumulus clouds, and tend to form in more relatively continuous layers. Type 4 SC form when cumulus clouds flatten and spread out. Sometimes this happens because the heating/lifting that produced the cumulus has lessened, but the atmosphere is moist enough that the clouds change character rather than dissipating.
Type 5 (SC not formed by the spreading/flattening of cumulus):
Type 5 SC often appear as a fairly continuous sheet or layer of large, flat, round cloud elements (as in the first two pictures below). At other times, they appear as low scraps or lumps of cloud (as in the third picture below). The former are usually based between 4,000 and 6,500 feet above ground, while the latter are usually based between 1,000 and 2,000 feet above ground. Extensive layers of flat stratocumulus (as in the first picture below) are common behind cold fronts in the Winter months, but in general the presence of stratocumulus clouds does not give any significant indication of impending weather conditions.
Post a Comment