South Shore Breaker

What exactly is a holepunch cloud?

- ALLISTER AALDERS weather@saltwire.com @allisterca­nada Allister Aalders is a weather specialist with Saltwire Network. Reach him at allister.aalders@ saltwire.com

When you look up at the clouds, you never know what exciting shapes or formations you might find.

Some formations are more interestin­g and uncommon than others. Matt Mckinnon captured a more unusual one recently in Glen Haven, N.S. He shared the photo of a hole in the cloud deck and wondered what might have caused it.

The cloud formation Matt captured is known as a fallstreak hole, also known as a holepunch cloud.

Fallstreak hole clouds form in the mid-to-high levels of our atmosphere, most commonly in altocumulu­s or cirrocumul­us clouds. These clouds are made up of tiny, supercoole­d water droplets, meaning the droplets are below the freezing mark but not yet frozen.

When aircraft pass through or travel near this type of cloud deck, the condensati­on trail from the aircraft introduces ice crystals. This causes the supercoole­d water droplets to freeze and form ice crystals.

These ice crystals then begin to fall from the sky but evaporate before reaching the ground, leaving a large circular or elliptical hole in the sky with some evaporativ­e clouds in the middle, resembling a holepunch.

You might think these clouds are common with aircraft coming and going all the time. However, fallstreak holes are quite uncommon as you need all the right ingredient­s to be in place simultaneo­usly for one to form.

So, if you ever see what looks like a hole in the sky, no, it’s not a UFO. It’s a fallstreak hole or holepunch cloud.

Have a weather question you would like answered? Send your weather photos and questions to: weather@saltwire. com.

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 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Matt Mckinnon captured this fallstreak hole, also known as a holepunch cloud.
CONTRIBUTE­D Matt Mckinnon captured this fallstreak hole, also known as a holepunch cloud.

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