U+26C8 Thunder Cloud and Rain
U+26C8 wurde in Version 5.2 in 2009 zu Unicode hinzugefügt. Er gehört zum Block
Dieses Zeichen ist ein Other Symbol und wird allgemein verwendet, das heißt, in keiner speziellen Schrift. Das Schriftzeichen ist auch bekannt als thunderstorm.
Das Zeichen ist keine Zusammensetzung. Seine Weite in ostasiatischen Texten wird vom Kontext bestimmt. Es kann weit oder schmal sein. In bidirektionalem Text handelt es als Other Neutral. Bei einem Richtungswechsel wird es nicht gespiegelt. U+26C8 bietet eine Zeilenumbruch-Gelegenheit an seiner Position, außer in einigen numerischen Kontexten.
Das CLDR-Projekt bezeichnet dieses Zeichen mit „Wolke mit Blitz und Regen“ für die Verwendung in Screenreader-Software. Es weist zusätzliche Namen zu, z.B. für die Suche in Emoji-Auswahlboxen: Blitz, Gewitter, Regen, Wetter, Wolke, wolkig.
Dieses Schriftzeichen ist als Emoji ausgezeichnet. Es wird als schwarz-weißes Zeichen auf unterstützenden Systemen angezeigt. Um es auf bunte Ansicht umzustellen, kannst du es mit
Die Wikipedia hat die folgende Information zu diesem Codepunkt:
A thunderstorm, also known as an electrical storm or a lightning storm, is a storm characterized by the presence of lightning and its acoustic effect on the Earth's atmosphere, known as thunder. Relatively weak thunderstorms are sometimes called thundershowers. Thunderstorms occur in a type of cloud known as a cumulonimbus. They are usually accompanied by strong winds and often produce heavy rain and sometimes snow, sleet, or hail, but some thunderstorms produce little precipitation or no precipitation at all. Thunderstorms may line up in a series or become a rainband, known as a squall line. Strong or severe thunderstorms include some of the most dangerous weather phenomena, including large hail, strong winds, and tornadoes. Some of the most persistent severe thunderstorms, known as supercells, rotate as do cyclones. While most thunderstorms move with the mean wind flow through the layer of the troposphere that they occupy, vertical wind shear sometimes causes a deviation in their course at a right angle to the wind shear direction.
Thunderstorms result from the rapid upward movement of warm, moist air, sometimes along a front. However, some kind of cloud forcing, whether it is a front, shortwave trough, or another system is needed for the air to rapidly accelerate upward. As the warm, moist air moves upward, it cools, condenses, and forms a cumulonimbus cloud that can reach heights of over 20 kilometres (12 mi). As the rising air reaches its dew point temperature, water vapor condenses into water droplets or ice, reducing pressure locally within the thunderstorm cell. Any precipitation falls the long distance through the clouds towards the Earth's surface. As the droplets fall, they collide with other droplets and become larger. The falling droplets create a downdraft as it pulls cold air with it, and this cold air spreads out at the Earth's surface, occasionally causing strong winds that are commonly associated with thunderstorms.
Thunderstorms can form and develop in any geographic location but most frequently within the mid-latitude, where warm, moist air from tropical latitudes collides with cooler air from polar latitudes. Thunderstorms are responsible for the development and formation of many severe weather phenomena, which can be potentially hazardous. Damage that results from thunderstorms is mainly inflicted by downburst winds, large hailstones, and flash flooding caused by heavy precipitation. Stronger thunderstorm cells are capable of producing tornadoes and waterspouts.
There are three types of thunderstorms: single-cell, multi-cell, and supercell. Supercell thunderstorms are the strongest and most severe. Mesoscale convective systems formed by favorable vertical wind shear within the tropics and subtropics can be responsible for the development of hurricanes. Dry thunderstorms, with no precipitation, can cause the outbreak of wildfires from the heat generated from the cloud-to-ground lightning that accompanies them. Several means are used to study thunderstorms: weather radar, weather stations, and video photography. Past civilizations held various myths concerning thunderstorms and their development as late as the 18th century. Beyond the Earth's atmosphere, thunderstorms have also been observed on the planets of Jupiter, Saturn, Neptune, and, probably, Venus.
Darstellungen
System | Darstellung |
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Nr. | 9928 |
UTF-8 | E2 9B 88 |
UTF-16 | 26 C8 |
UTF-32 | 00 00 26 C8 |
URL-kodiert | %E2%9B%88 |
HTML hex reference | ⛈ |
Falsches windows-1252-Mojibake | ⛈ |
Alias | thunderstorm |
Kodierung: GB18030 (Hex-Bytes) | 81 37 B6 32 |
Anderswo
Vollständiger Eintrag
Eigenschaft | Wert |
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5.2 (2009) | |
THUNDER CLOUD AND RAIN | |
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