Precipitation. Usually it is rain, but it could be sleet, snow, or hail.
When cloud droplets combine to form larger drops, they fall to the Earth as rain.
When cloud droplets combine to form larger drops, they become heavy enough to overcome the uplift in the atmosphere and fall to Earth as precipitation (rain or snow). This process is known as coalescence, where smaller droplets collide and merge to form larger drops due to gravity.
When cloud droplets combine and grow large enough to fall to earth, they form precipitation like rain or snow. This process is known as coalescence, where smaller droplets collide and merge into larger drops due to gravity. Eventually, these larger drops become heavy enough to overcome the upward currents within the cloud and fall as precipitation.
precipitation
When liquid water droplets are big enough to fall to Earth, we call it rain.
Cloud droplets fall to Earth as precipitation when they grow large enough to overcome air resistance. This can happen when they coalesce into larger droplets or freeze into ice crystals. Gravity then pulls them down as rain, snow, sleet, or hail.
Why do the clouds droplets not fall to the earth
The moisture in a cloud that is heavy enough to fall back to Earth primarily consists of water droplets or ice crystals that have coalesced to form larger particles. When these droplets grow to a size of about 0.5 millimeters or more, they become heavy enough to overcome the updrafts in the cloud and begin to fall as precipitation, such as rain or snow. This process is influenced by factors like temperature, humidity, and cloud dynamics.
Evaporation: Water from the lake is heated by the sun and turns into water vapor, rising into the atmosphere. Condensation: The water vapor cools and condenses into tiny water droplets, forming clouds. Precipitation: When the water droplets in the cloud combine and become heavy enough, they fall back to the Earth's surface as rain.
By definition, a cloud is microscopic water droplets. Brought down to earth level, a cloud is called "fog" - which is the same thing: microscopic water droplets.
Rain falls to the ground from clouds when water droplets in the clouds combine to form larger droplets that become heavy enough to fall due to gravity.
they get bigger because the water droplets are cold and there is also water vapour in the air which is hotand when they meet the water vapour changes back to water droplets which then combine with the water droplets falling from the thunder cloud!!