Learning about clouds

No.13250389 ViewReplyOriginalReport
Clouds are pretty cool, I'm a novice at math. I switched to a math major because I flunked my CS enrollment requirements because apparently "my adherence to good style is poor regardless of internal and external correctness"
or whatever the fuck.
Anyways, I probably spend a decent amount of time just staring at the clouds and wondering how they work.
My knowledge of introductory diffy qs allows me to guess that that's essentially what can describe the the best.
So I assume I'd have to study more Diffy Qs, Dynamic systems, and fluids to understand clouds right?
I was going to be an engineer but when I took physics the prof was awful and the book was awful it's nothing like a math textbook which are awesome.
Are there any good physics books for the mathematically inclined?
Also I've never had trouble with math, I always hear my peers bitch and whine so much about it but I just end up thinking it's trivial, but I'm pretty much shit at everything else especially things that involve human language. programming itself is pretty simple to me, but the commenting bullshit make me lose like 40% of my total grade which made me an uncompetitive candidate for the program.
I seriously don't care about muh physics pretending to be true and based on something real or whatever, I don't care about that argument at all. Math is just a thing that can describe/model those physical events in mathematical space, there is no satisfactory argument so working more with the math than the bullshit reasoning will help me in the long run.
last class I took was intro Lin A.
taking Advanced honors calculus this summer, it's basically about the calculus topics they ignored for the engineers' sakes, it's required for the math major.
again not interested in physics in itself, just clouds.