twinbus
Fog is what we call the cloud close to the ground.
Cloud seeding - consists of spraying a microscopic powder of Silver Iodide into clouds. The water vapour condenses onto the particles, which call as rain. It's an effective way of releasing the water from rain clouds over a designated area.
Clouds.
Large raincloud. There are two parts to this question. The word itself stands for two separate things. Cumulus clouds are the large clouds that often usher in thunderstorms or heavier rains. We also see them in some nicer weather days popping up in fair weather. Pilots call these cumulus clouds popcorn cumulus, or fair weather cumulus because no rain or bad weather is occurring at that moment. They can become bigger issues as the day wears on. Nimbus is the second portion of this word. Nimbus means water is leaving the cloud and hitting the ground. Therefore your cloud is a large puffing storm cloud that is emitting rain that is hitting the ground.
Clouds that look like cotton balls are probably cumulus clouds.
There does not appear to be an official collective term for a group of clouds. Some people call them a group of clouds. Others just use "a group of" and the type of cloud they see like cirrus clouds or cumulonimbus clouds.
Fog is what we call the cloud close to the ground.
Clouds are formed from condensed water molecules.
There are Three dirrerent low level clouds Stratocumulus, Stratus, and Cumulus. stratocumulus
A large concentration of tiny water droplets is called a cloud. Clouds are formed from water vapor that condense into clouds.
William David Alcorn and his friends were looking up at the clouds one day and saw a really big cloud they were learning about clouds in school and they dissent know what to call this cloud so thus the word humongous was born.
The cloud you are asking about is called the Cirrus cloud. It nearly always is the highest cloud in the sky and is very white and thin to the naked eye.
Cloud seeding - consists of spraying a microscopic powder of Silver Iodide into clouds. The water vapour condenses onto the particles, which call as rain. It's an effective way of releasing the water from rain clouds over a designated area.
Clouds can build up very high electrical charges. This can create a very high EMF (Electromotive Force, AKA Voltage) between clouds or from cloud to earth. When this force gets large enough, an electrical discharge current will arc from cloud to cloud or cloud to earth. This discharge arc makes itself known by the light it releases (which we call lightning) and the sound it creates (which we call thunder) as it heats the air along the discharge path.
Clouds are formed by water vapor, sometimes you can notice water vapor by what we call, Fog. It can get so thick making it impossible to see.
Clouds.
In a nutshell, yes. They are not a layer of the atmosphere, but since a cloud is humidity in the atmosphere I would call it a component that makes up our atmosphere.