Clouds are made of condensed water vapor droplets. When the droplets merge with increasing condensation, they get heavier and gravity drops them to the ground in the form of rain. The clouds are loaded with moisture and produce millions of gallons of water, so they do not run out of water very quickly when it continues to rain
The clouds are rain. all the clouds are is water vapor(thats a fancy name for microscopic water) the water is so SMALL in the clouds it is too light to fall. then when it is heavy enough to fall you get rain
Cumulus and nimbus clouds hold water in the form of water droplets or ice crystals. These clouds are typically associated with precipitation and can release water in the form of rain, snow, or hail.
When clouds reach their maximum capacity to hold water vapor, it is known as saturation. This often leads to precipitation in the form of rain, snow, or other types of precipitation.
Because of Gravity, the clouds hold have the maximum amount of water so they release it by precipitating(rain).
Cumulonimbus clouds typically hold rain. These are large, towering clouds that can produce heavy rain, thunderstorms, and sometimes hail. When these clouds form, they indicate the potential for intense precipitation.
Cumulus clouds can develop into rain clouds, but they do not typically produce rain on their own. When cumulus clouds grow larger and combine with other clouds, they can form cumulonimbus clouds that produce precipitation.
Clouds just collect water, they precipitate (rain) when there is a large amount of water in the clouds, so the clouds that you don't see rain are clouds that have collected water but not enough to precipitate.
Yes
When clouds get so full of water droplets that they can't hold any more, the water falls back to the ground as rain! Sometimes the water droplets freeze and fall to the ground as snow, sleet, or hail. Water or ice that comes from clouds is called precipitation.
Clouds play a crucial role in the water cycle by holding water vapor that eventually falls as rain. After rain, clouds continue to hold moisture, which can evaporate and form new clouds. This process helps replenish groundwater by providing a continuous source of precipitation that seeps into the ground, eventually recharging underground aquifers.
i think that clouds hold their water by saturation. so when the water gets more heavy then the cloud the water turns into droplets(rain). i know that this is not the best answer but at least i tried.
Clouds contain water vapor (steam) which condenses and becomes water when it gets cold. This heavier water then falls down as rain. It's the same reason that your cold glass of iced tea sweats-- the water in the air cools down around it and becomes water.