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Rain consists of falling water droplets.
The dew point refers to water droplets forming on the grass as the temperature drops. This is actually a condensation process.
No, clouds are little droplets of liquid water (or ice). Those small droplets or ice crystals grow together to become rain drops or snow or hail etc.
they are droplets of water ( the water that drops from clouds are 0.02 mm an average rain drop is 2 mm ) or they are droplets of ice (like hail)
As the air cools, it can contain less and less water vapor as a gas. So the vapor condenses and creates visible mist called fog, clouds, drizzle, and rain depending on where the water vapor condenses and how much of it condenses. The rain and drizzle forms as the mist groups together and creates the droplets and drops.
First of all you will see an emulsion of very tiny droplets of water and of oil. Gradually these tiny droplets will touch and combine with each other. Ultimately the oil droplets rise to the top because they are less dense than water. The water drops meanwhile are joining together and sinking below the oil. Finally the oil and water will have separated.
water drops
Rain consists of falling water droplets.
The dew point refers to water droplets forming on the grass as the temperature drops. This is actually a condensation process.
water droplets.
The tiny drops of water are cool and it condenses.
Yes clouds are made of tiny water droplets.
No, clouds are little droplets of liquid water (or ice). Those small droplets or ice crystals grow together to become rain drops or snow or hail etc.
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.
They become Clouds that precipitation falls from.
Simple answer: They don't. Clouds ARE water - tiny, tiny droplets of water just like fog. If colder air moves into a cloud, it causes there to be even more water droplets forming. When the droplets get close enough together, they start touching and turning themselves into even larger droplets. Then the "even larger" water droplets touch, and make water drops . . . at some point in this process, the water droplets grow large enough that they are too heavy to stay where they are, and then they fall to the ground. This falling to the ground is what we call, "Rain".
they are droplets of water ( the water that drops from clouds are 0.02 mm an average rain drop is 2 mm ) or they are droplets of ice (like hail)