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Twin fallstreak holes in Kent

11:05
28 August 2024

Hole punch clouds
Twin fallstreak holes in Kent

Two fallstreak holes side-by-side in cloud cover over Margate.Twin fallstreak holes appeared over Margate, Kent. - © Annie Bainbrydge

This unusual sight of twin fallstreak holes, or hole punch clouds, was snapped in Kent this week.

This unusual formation appears as a gap, or hole in the surrounding cirrocumulus or altocumulus clouds. In this shot from Margate, they are altocumulus clouds.

Cirrocumulus are recognisable by their bright white colour and tiny puff-ball appearance, whereas altocumulus clouds are darker in shade and larger.

These clouds are high enough, and consequently cold enough, to contain supercooled water droplets. These water droplets within the cloud are sub-zero, but not actually frozen.

Regular water, like our drinking water, contains small particles, allowing ice crystals to form at 0°C. Pure water droplets within clouds have no other particles present, remaining liquid down to -40°C.

When aircraft pass through the cloud layer, it causes the surrounding air to expand and cool. The change in temperature can then cause the water droplets to suddenly freeze into solid ice crystals.

These ice crystals then fall from the sky as virga, or fallstreaks, which is precipitation that doesn’t reach the ground.

It might sound surprising, but the process of freezing actually gives off a tiny bit of heat. This heat is enough to evaporate the surrounding water droplets, leaving the sharply defined hole in the clouds that you can see in the images.

Have you seen these, or any other interesting cloud formations? Show us!

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Ryan Hathaway
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