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Water on Earth is subject to the pull of gravity. Water in the form of clouds is in such tiny drop-lets, that it's suspended until something makes the drop-lets join together, making them heavy enough to be pulled back to Earth.
Most of the time cold weather.
A Low Pressure System
No, because it would have been absorbed into the dry ground or by a plant. It could have dried up or gone back to the clouds.
convex!
A trajectory is the path a rocket takes, it is not a thing that can be dropped. Further rockets are used to "launch" a satellite into orbit, not drop it (so that it falls back to Earth).
no. gravity causes objects to fall. So unless the sun(earth's source of gravity) moves, then earth will not "drop"
Yes, the booster rockets. This usually happens after their fuel has been spent, and they merely drop back to earth and land in the ocean where they are retrieved and used again for another flight.
they fall back to Earth
Possible broken spring.
Due to the lack of gravity in outer space, an object and the astronauts in a spaceship, will float. Back on Earth, gravity causes an object to drop to the ground, and keeps our feet firmly on the ground.
pop it ,lock it ,sock it ,rocket
normal fault
faulting causes large blocks of the Earth's crust to drop down relative to other blocks
A wall cloud marks an area of low pressure within a mesocyclone. The pressure drop causes a temperature drop, which in turn causes water vapr to condense.
Water on Earth is subject to the pull of gravity. Water in the form of clouds is in such tiny drop-lets, that it's suspended until something makes the drop-lets join together, making them heavy enough to be pulled back to Earth.
Gravity