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The information below has been directly taken from the
source website.
Source-
www.islam-guide.com
The Quran on Clouds:
Scientists have studied cloud types and have realized that rain
clouds are formed and shaped according to definite systems and certain steps
connected with certain types of wind and clouds.
One kind of rain cloud is the
cumulonimbus cloud. Meteorologists have studied how cumulonimbus clouds are
formed and how they produce rain, hail, and lightning.
They have found that cumulonimbus
clouds go through the following steps to produce rain:
1) The clouds are pushed by the
wind: Cumulonimbus
clouds begin to form when wind pushes some small pieces of clouds (cumulus
clouds) to an area where these clouds converge (see figures 17 and 18).
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Figure 17:
Satellite photo showing the clouds moving towards the convergence areas B,
C, and D. The arrows indicate the directions of the wind. (The Use of
Satellite Pictures in Weather Analysis and Forecasting, Anderson and
others, p. 188.) (Click on the image to enlarge it.) |
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Figure 18:
Small pieces of clouds (cumulus clouds) moving towards a convergence zone
near the horizon, where we can see a large cumulonimbus cloud. (Clouds
and Storms, Ludlam, plate 7.4.) (Click on the image to enlarge it.) |
2) Joining:
Then the small clouds join together forming a larger cloud1
(see figures 18 and 19).
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Figure 19:
(A) Isolated small pieces of clouds (cumulus clouds). (B) When the small
clouds join together, updrafts within the larger cloud increase, so the
cloud is stacked up. Water drops are indicated by
·.
(The Atmosphere, Anthes and others, p. 269.) (Click on the image
to enlarge it.) |
3) Stacking:
When the small clouds join together, updrafts within the larger cloud increase.
The updrafts near the center of the cloud are stronger than those near the
edges.2
These updrafts cause the cloud body to grow vertically, so the cloud is stacked
up (see figures 19 (B), 20, and 21). This vertical growth causes the cloud body
to stretch into cooler regions of the atmosphere, where drops of water and hail
formulate and begin to grow larger and larger. When these drops of water and
hail become too heavy for the updrafts to support them, they begin to fall from
the cloud as rain, hail, etc.3
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Figure 20:
A cumulonimbus cloud. After the cloud is stacked up, rain comes out of
it. (Weather and Climate, Bodin, p.123.) |

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Figure 21:
A cumulonimbus cloud. (A Colour Guide to Clouds, Scorer and Wexler,
p. 23.) |
God has said in the Quran:
Have
you not seen how God makes the clouds move gently, then joins them together,
then makes them into a stack, and then you see the rain come out of it....
(Quran, 24:43)
Meteorologists have only recently come
to know these details of cloud formation, structure, and function by using
advanced equipment like planes, satellites, computers, balloons, and other
equipment, to study wind and its direction, to measure humidity and its
variations, and to determine the levels and variations of atmospheric pressure.4
The preceding verse, after mentioning
clouds and rain, speaks about hail and lightning:
....And
He sends down hail from mountains (clouds) in the sky, and He strikes with it
whomever He wills, and turns it from whomever He wills. The vivid flash of its
lightning nearly blinds the sight.
(Quran, 24:43)
Meteorologists have
found that these cumulonimbus clouds, that shower hail, reach a height of 25,000
to 30,000 ft (4.7 to 5.7 miles),5
like mountains, as the Quran said, “...And He sends down hail from mountains
(clouds) in the sky...” (see figure 21 above).
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This verse may
raise a question. Why does the verse say “its lightning” in a reference
to the hail? Does this mean that hail is the major factor in producing
lightning? Let us see what the book entitled Meteorology Today says
about this. It says that a cloud becomes electrified as hail falls through a
region in the cloud of supercooled droplets and ice crystals. As liquid
droplets collide with a hailstone, they freeze on contact and release latent
heat. This keeps the surface of the hailstone warmer than that of the
surrounding ice crystals. When the hailstone comes in contact with an ice
crystal, an important phenomenon occurs: electrons flow from the colder object
toward the warmer object. Hence, the hailstone becomes negatively charged. The
same effect occurs when supercooled droplets come in contact with a hailstone
and tiny splinters of positively charged ice break off. These lighter
positively charged particles are then carried to the upper part of the cloud by
updrafts. The hail, left with a negative charge, falls towards the bottom of
the cloud, thus the lower part of the cloud becomes negatively charged. These
negative charges are then discharged as lightning.6
We conclude from this that hail is the major factor in producing lightning.
This information on
lightning was discovered recently. Until 1600 AD, Aristotle’s ideas on
meteorology were dominant. For example, he said that the atmosphere contains
two kinds of exhalation, moist and dry. He also said that thunder is the sound
of the collision of the dry exhalation with the neighboring clouds, and
lightning is the inflaming and burning of the dry exhalation with a thin and
faint fire.7
These are some of the ideas on meteorology that were dominant at the time of the
Quran’s revelation, fourteen centuries ago.
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