Clouds that include the name "nimbus" tend to be the ones that create precipitation. Nimbostratus clouds create falling rain and snow, while cumulonimbus clouds are associated with thunderstorms.
First the sun evaporates rain/puddles or other liquids, then these liquids and/or dirt particles that were also evaporated condense (condensation) into clouds. After the clouds evaporate enough water condense into a full cloud, depending on the weather it would then precipitate into rain, sleet, snow, or hail. Now for the second question, if the sun didn't evaporate water there would be no water to form rain clouds. If there were no condensation there would be no rain clouds (there would be clouds just not rain clouds) and if there were no precipitation there would be no rain.
Well to rain on us of course clouds are even made of rain in a gas form
no, clouds do not run out of rain, otherwise we would not have and blue sky, when the clouds have rain it means that the water from the surface of the ground has been evaporated causing the clouds to form. When it rains the clouds empty and disappear.
Relief rain forms when moist air is forced to rise over a topographic barrier, such as a mountain range. As the air rises, it cools and condenses to form clouds, eventually resulting in precipitation in the form of rain. The type of clouds that form can vary, but commonly include cumulus and nimbus clouds.
Clouds form when water starts to condense, so clouds eventually grow until they rain themselves to death-clouds mean rain.
In solid form: sleet, hail, snow In liquid form: rain, drizzle, fog
Nimbus clouds are the type of clouds that are typically associated with rain. These clouds are characterized by their dark, thick appearance and are responsible for producing precipitation in the form of rain.
Cumulonimbus clouds typically hold rain. These are large, towering clouds that can produce heavy rain, thunderstorms, and sometimes hail. When these clouds form, they indicate the potential for intense precipitation.
Rain forms in nimbostratus clouds, which are thick, dark clouds that cover the sky and are associated with steady precipitation.
Mist, clouds, rain.
No.
There is no way for us to make clouds rain when we want them to. If we could do that then we would not be worried to much about it being to dry, we would just make it rain. Why can't seeding the clouds make them rain ?