stratus and cumulus.
The clouds are rain. all the clouds are is water vapor(thats a fancy name for microscopic water) the water is so SMALL in the clouds it is too light to fall. then when it is heavy enough to fall you get rain
Falling moisture of clouds refers to the process by which water droplets in clouds coalesce and grow until they are heavy enough to fall as precipitation, such as rain or snow. This process is known as precipitation and occurs when the moisture content in the clouds exceeds their capacity to hold water, leading to the release of precipitation.
All clouds have the potential to be rain clouds. It just depends on how much water vapor is in them. Once the water vapor in a cloud cools or becomes too heavy, it rains. Clouds with lots of water are generally dark gray as opposed to white clouds with less water.
i think your saying are clouds made out of water and yes they are.
clouds are made of water and water vapour (almost the same thing) ,so anythign that isnt water or water vapour is not made in clouds
Cirrus clouds.
The clouds are rain. all the clouds are is water vapor(thats a fancy name for microscopic water) the water is so SMALL in the clouds it is too light to fall. then when it is heavy enough to fall you get rain
Clouds carry water because the air in the atmosphere holds water vapor. When the air cools, the water vapor condenses into liquid droplets, forming clouds. These droplets can eventually grow large enough to fall as precipitation when they become too heavy for the cloud to hold.
When clouds reach their maximum capacity to hold water vapor, it is known as saturation. This often leads to precipitation in the form of rain, snow, or other types of precipitation.
i think that clouds hold their water by saturation. so when the water gets more heavy then the cloud the water turns into droplets(rain). i know that this is not the best answer but at least i tried.
At higher altitudes it is colder. The cooler air can't hold the water in gas form so it condenses out as clouds.
Water vapor from the atmosphere condenses to form clouds. When the air cools, it can no longer hold all the moisture it contains, causing the water vapor to condense into tiny water droplets or ice crystals, which then come together to form clouds.
The process of evaporated water vapor cooling down and forming clouds is called condensation. This occurs when the air cools and can no longer hold the water vapor, causing it to condense into liquid water droplets that gather to form clouds.
Clouds are made of condensed water vapor droplets. When the droplets merge with increasing condensation, they get heavier and gravity drops them to the ground in the form of rain. The clouds are loaded with moisture and produce millions of gallons of water, so they do not run out of water very quickly when it continues to rain
Some clouds become bigger because they hold more water. If the cloud was over an area with alot of water while it was hot outside, they will tend to be bigger then clouds over completely dry land in the cold.
Clouds have to do with water because water vapor precipitates into the clouds.
When water vapor cools and condenses into tiny droplets, it forms clouds. This process occurs in the atmosphere when the air reaches a specific temperature at which it can no longer hold all the water vapor it contains, leading to the formation of visible clouds.