Clouds
Water appears in the liquid state in the atmosphere in the form of clouds, fog and mist. These consist of millions of tiny drops of liquid water suspended in the air currents. If these collect together as bigger drops they can fall as rain.
dust and other particles
well, they collect all together in the cloud and when it is full enough it all drops as precipitation
Water Vapour is considered as gas and since its particles are spread out it is light and therefore able to rise up into the clouds. As the clouds gather/collect water vapour it gets heavier. Cold air cools down the water vapour turning it back into water droplets and fall back to the ground.
Clouds form when millions of tiny drops of evaporated water collect. When a cloud gets too much water, it will shed the excess in the form of rain, hale, sleet or snow.
Clouds form when water droplets collect on dust particles in the air. When the clouds become saturated, rain falls from the sky.
Well, mist is just small droplets of water suspended in air, but if you mean to collect it then condensers would be one way to do it.
The particles of water vapor collect around dust in the air. When they collect, they form droplets of liquid water. In the case of boiling water the steam particles collide with one and other and form droplets large enough to fall down or a decrease in atmospheric pressure and temperature will cause water to form on cooler surfaces
dew
No
dew
collect: gather such as water droplets colllected on the flask as the water evaporated. This represents a physical change rather than a chemical change.
a cloud is formed
Water appears in the liquid state in the atmosphere in the form of clouds, fog and mist. These consist of millions of tiny drops of liquid water suspended in the air currents. If these collect together as bigger drops they can fall as rain.
http://www.allstar.fiu.edu/aerojava/fltenv3.htm :Except at temperatures well below freezing, clouds are composed of very small droplets of water which collect on microscopic water absorbent particles of solid matter in the air (such as salt from evaporating sea spray, dust, and smoke particles). The abundance of these particles, called condensation nuclei, on which the droplets form, permits condensation to occur generally as soon as the air becomes saturated. If the condensation nuclei are particularly abundant, condensation may occur at less than 100% relative humidity.
It depends on the density of the medium in which the cells are suspended.
A cloud is a collection of water droplets that float and collect in the Troposphere and occasionally in the lower portion of the Stratosphere.