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I think the word you're referring to is 'precipitation'. After water vapor in the air condenses and becomes tiny droplets of liquid water, and the tiny droplets merge to form larger, heavier drops that are too heavy to remain suspended in the air, "precipitation" refers to the rain, snow, sleet, hail, or drizzle that falls to the surface.
Yes, the word 'spray' is both a verb and a noun. The noun 'spray' is a word for liquid that is moving through the air in the form of tiny drops; a liquid in a container that can be forced out in tiny drops; the container of such a liquid; an act or instance of using such a container; a word for a group of flower on a branch used for decoration; an attractive arrangement of flowers; a word for a thing.
Smoke is a colloid because it consists of tiny solid particles suspended in a gas (air).
because water molecules attach to dust particle. when tiny mass of water has formed on a dust particle, other molecules will join the liquid mass.
This happens when the air cools. If the water particles get close enough to form liquid, the process is called condensation.
Water appears in the liquid state in the atmosphere in the form of clouds, fog and mist. These consist of millions of tiny drops of liquid water suspended in the air currents. If these collect together as bigger drops they can fall as rain.
It depends because water and liquid has tiny tiny drops that can be 50 degrees or drops that can be 90 degrees. You only feel the average of the water or liquid. Room temperature is colder and hotter depending on the average liquids and tiny tiny drops
The rapid zig-zag movement of tiny dust particles suspended in air or in liquid
I don't think it is. Mist is tiny droplets, suspended in the air.I don't think it is. Mist is tiny droplets, suspended in the air.I don't think it is. Mist is tiny droplets, suspended in the air.I don't think it is. Mist is tiny droplets, suspended in the air.
Cloud
Individual droplets are so small, that they can stay suspended in the air. If the droplets combine into larger drops that are too heavy to stay suspended, they fall as raindrops.
I think the word you're referring to is 'precipitation'. After water vapor in the air condenses and becomes tiny droplets of liquid water, and the tiny droplets merge to form larger, heavier drops that are too heavy to remain suspended in the air, "precipitation" refers to the rain, snow, sleet, hail, or drizzle that falls to the surface.
Yes, the word 'spray' is both a verb and a noun. The noun 'spray' is a word for liquid that is moving through the air in the form of tiny drops; a liquid in a container that can be forced out in tiny drops; the container of such a liquid; an act or instance of using such a container; a word for a group of flower on a branch used for decoration; an attractive arrangement of flowers; a word for a thing.
true
A cloud.
Depending on where they are in the air and their sizes: fog clouds drizzle mist
Yes, correct. A solid or liquid suspended in a gas is known as an aerosol.