Warm air rises quicklier then cold air. When those two meet, the warmer and lighter air rises OVER the colder and heavier air. If the warm air rises the warm air coolsdown when it's very high, and then the warm air forms clouds. A front is the place where cold and warm air meets. Along fronts in Europe, there are found a lot of rain and clouds most of the time.
fog clouds
When a cyclone forms, warm, moist air over the ocean rises up from the ocean surface. As this warm, moist air rises, it cools off, and the water in the air forms clouds. The cycle keeps going because air rushes in to fill the void left as the warm moist air rises. This new air also becomes warm and moist and so it rises, too. Again, the cycle continues. Warm air rises, the surrounding air swirls in to take its place, and so on. The whole system of clouds and wind spins and grows, because it is being constantly fed by the ocean's heat and water evaporating from the surface. This causes massive rain clouds to develop.
Typically it rises, but if a very large layer of cold air is above it it may get trapped, resulting in an inversion.
Warm air expands and cools as it rises; the temperature decreases below dew point, so the water vapour changes phase from gas to liquid
Clouds form when warm, humid air rises and cools to it's dew point.
humidity
clouds
Condensation by warm air
unstable environment
unstable environment
Clouds are form because humid air rises upward.
Clouds form when warm moist air rises, cools and condenses.
clouds
When saturated air is warm, it creates an unstable air mass. As the moisture content rises, the humidity rises as well. This can lead to warm and humid conditions.
maritime tropical.the type of air mass that is moist and warm is, i think, are clouds.
Yes, as the warm air rises, it cools, condenses and then forms clouds.