All of the common clouds are a type of aerosol. Aerosol is a suspension of fine solid or liquid particles in a gas. That is where aerosol spray cans get their name. They produce an aerosol mist when their contents are released into the air. Obviously aerosol spray cans are not the source of all clouds and precipitation. They just produce a small cloud where they are used. When the material within an aerosol coalesces and becomes too heavy to stay in suspension, it precipitates out of the cloud.
While most clouds, those made of solids or liquids, are aerosols, there are other types of clouds. Gas clouds are a high concentration of one type of gas within another gas or a vacuum. Some galaxies appear to be gas clouds. Plasma clouds share a similar definition. Lighting is a natural example of a plasma cloud.
Altostratus clouds are found in the middle layer of the atmosphere known as the altocumulus layer, typically between 6,500 to 20,000 feet. They are thin, gray clouds that often cover the sky and can sometimes produce light precipitation.
Well a nimbus cloud is not a cloud. If you are referring to a cumulonimbus cloud than yes. A cumulonimbus cloud is a storm cloud. Clouds that have names that include -nimbus or nimbo- are likely to produce precipitation.
no some are not in cold enough places
No, not all stratus clouds bring rain and thunderstorms. Stratus clouds are generally associated with overcast or cloudy weather, but they do not necessarily produce precipitation or thunderstorms. Rain and thunderstorms are more commonly associated with cumulonimbus clouds.
All clouds have the potential to be rain clouds. It just depends on how much water vapor is in them. Once the water vapor in a cloud cools or becomes too heavy, it rains. Clouds with lots of water are generally dark gray as opposed to white clouds with less water.
Yes, the source of all clouds and precipitation is water vapor. Water evaporates from bodies of water, such as oceans, lakes, and rivers, and rises into the atmosphere where it cools and condenses to form clouds. When the conditions are right, these clouds release precipitation in the form of rain, snow, sleet, or hail.
The main source of clouds and precipitation is water vapor in the atmosphere. Water evaporates from bodies of water and land surfaces, rises into the atmosphere, and then condenses to form clouds. When the condensed water droplets become heavy enough, they fall as precipitation, such as rain or snow.
True. Clouds and precipitation are formed when water vapor in the atmosphere condenses into liquid water droplets or ice crystals.
Nimbus clouds are the type of clouds that typically hold precipitation, such as rain or snow. These clouds are often thick and dark in appearance, indicating that they are heavily saturated with moisture and are likely to release precipitation.
Precipitation forms when water droplets in clouds grow large enough to fall due to gravity. Not all clouds have enough moisture or updrafts to support precipitation. Additionally, some clouds may be too high in the atmosphere for precipitation to reach the ground before evaporating.
Condensation and precipitation are sourced from water vapor in the atmosphere. Water vapor condenses into liquid droplets to form clouds, and when these droplets combine and become too heavy, they fall to the ground as precipitation in the form of rain, snow, sleet, or hail.
The main source of water in the water cycle is the Earth's oceans, which account for about 97% of the planet's water. This water evaporates due to heat from the sun, forming water vapor that rises into the atmosphere and eventually condenses into clouds to form precipitation.
Yes. Certain clouds, like cumulus clouds, show a possibility of rain. Some clouds, like cirrus clouds, don't show a large possibility, while cumulonimbus clouds almost guarrantee precipitation of some sort. And pardon my spellin of guarantee. Spelling isn't my strong point.
No. First of all, cirrus are high-altitude whispy clouds. Low-altitude puffy clouds are called cumulus. Cumulus clouds can occasionally produce a few drops of rain, but usually indicate fair weather. Precipitation is more often associated with stratus and cumulonimbus clouds.
All three contain some type of gas.
1. They all come from clouds. 2. They all are formed by precipitation.
All three contain some type of gas.