Yes
Smoky Mountain Rain was created in 1980-09.
Not in outer space; but it does rain on Earth and Earth is in space so in a sense it does.
False. A rain shadow is the dry area on the leeward side of a mountain caused by the blocking of moisture-laden air by the mountain, leading to little or no precipitation. The side of the mountain with clouds and rain is the windward side.
The area behind a mountain with little rain is called a rain shadow.
Yes, on earth. There is no rain in space.
No, it does not rain in space because there is no atmosphere to support weather phenomena like rain. Space is a vacuum, so water cannot exist in liquid form to fall as rain.
A rain shadow.
when rain or snow falls the windward side of a mountain the side that faces wind direction gets most of the rain or snow and the leeward side of a mountain the side that faces away from the wind gets less rain it is said to be in a rain shadow .
you get the rain god mountain somewhere on the map
As a simple example: a tall mountain near the sea. The prevailing wind off the sea carries a lot of rain water. On reaching the mountain, and in order to rise over the mountain, the clouds tend to rise meeting colder air at the higher altitudes. This means that it will rain, as cold air can't contain much water vapour. So the rain mainly falls on the side of the mountain facing the sea. Once over the mountain, there is very little rain left. So, on the side of the mountain away from the sea, a rain shadow is formed and very little rain will fall in the area of the shadow.
Death Valley is a rain shadow desert in the U.S. It is in the rain shadow effect of the Sierra Nevada mountain range.
rain shadow