Adiabatic cooling relates to cloud formation in such, when it pushes air out of the way when rising, energy is released into the surroundings and the air cools "adiabatically." When the air that is cooling meets up with other air that is in the same situation, a cloud starts to forms, and when that cloud forms, it cools enough when it reaches a certain altitude and rains.
Two conditions required for cloud formation include air cooling and saturation
The third principle is: Hot air rises. This allows moisture in the air to condense when it hits colder air, making clouds.
Clouds occur when moist air is cooled. This usually a fall in barometric pressure, or expansion in our atmosphere. There are other factors at work, however, one of them is called adiabatic heating and cooling. When a volume of air is compressed, its temperature rises, and when it is decompressed, or expanded, then it cools. In the case of cloud formation, it is the drop in temperature by adiabatic cooling, and the content of moisture in the air, that make the difference in how clouds are formed.
Cloud formation in the highs and inhibit cloud formation in the lows.
Clouds form when water evaporates, travels up the atmosphere, cools and then condenses.
Adiabatic Cooling I know this for an absolute fact, says right here in my textbook haha
Two conditions required for cloud formation include air cooling and saturation
The third principle is: Hot air rises. This allows moisture in the air to condense when it hits colder air, making clouds.
Clouds occur when moist air is cooled. This usually a fall in barometric pressure, or expansion in our atmosphere. There are other factors at work, however, one of them is called adiabatic heating and cooling. When a volume of air is compressed, its temperature rises, and when it is decompressed, or expanded, then it cools. In the case of cloud formation, it is the drop in temperature by adiabatic cooling, and the content of moisture in the air, that make the difference in how clouds are formed.
the unequal heating of Earth's surface.
Clouds do many things and different types of clouds mean different things, but the most important part of cloud formation is cooling by expansion of air.
Cloud formation in the highs and inhibit cloud formation in the lows.
Clouds form when water evaporates, travels up the atmosphere, cools and then condenses.
An accessory cloud is a small cloud formation which is found attached to or close by a major cloud in one of the main cloud genera, responsible for its formation.
No
No
Pollution does affect cloud formation. In the case of aerosol pollutants, if the air pollutants reflect the sun's light, the cloud cover increases. If they absorb it, cloud growth is stunted.