i think so precipitation. goodluck!
rain!
water vapor
A dew drop is a tiny drop of water that appears on objects in the morning or evening due to condensation. As the surface cools, atmospheric moisture condenses at a rate greater than that of which it can evaporate.
These particles are molecules of gaseous water.
The answer is "yes": Rainwater does contain dissolved solids. A few things have to be known to understand how rains form. 1. There are many kinds of substances floating in the air in the form of tiny particles, e.g. dust, pollen grains. 2. The density of water vapor is lower than that of the air, therefore water vapor goes up in the air. 3. The higher the altitude, the colder it becomes. Water vapor cools down as it ascends in the air. The molecules of the cooled water vapor are attracted to the surface of the floating solid particles. It takes billions of water molecules to form a droplet. The droplets collide with each other and merge into bigger and heavier water drops. It takes about a million droplets to make a raindrop, which finally becomes so heavy that the air cannot hold it up any longer. Then many such drops fall out of the sky, and that's how the rain forms. The tiny solid particles floating in the air are very important--they are the bases of rain drops. In fact, without solid particles, there will be no rains no matter how much water vapor there is in the air. Artificial rainmaking is to spray very fine solid particles in the air so that water vapor can have bases to form water drops. Therefore, rainwater is not pure water, and there are many tiny solid particles within every raindrop. Some solid particles may dissolve in water, some not.
Yes clouds are made of tiny water droplets.
Vapor into liquid is condensation.
Condensation
Condensation
water vapor
This physical process is called liquefaction and occur under the boiling point. Thie depends on the pressure.
The tiny drops of water are cool and it condenses.
When we boil water and expose the steam (water vapor) to a cold surface, it will condense into tiny drops of water on the cold surface. If you can see the 'steam'rising above the water, it has already condensed into tiny droplets of water in the cool air.
It depends because water and liquid has tiny tiny drops that can be 50 degrees or drops that can be 90 degrees. You only feel the average of the water or liquid. Room temperature is colder and hotter depending on the average liquids and tiny tiny drops
These particles are molecules of gaseous water.
Fog is made of tiny drops of water
A dew drop is a tiny drop of water that appears on objects in the morning or evening due to condensation. As the surface cools, atmospheric moisture condenses at a rate greater than that of which it can evaporate.
yes it is made of water vapor ====================== No. Water vapor is an invisible gas. You can't see water vapor. Clouds, on the other hand, can be seen. That's because clouds are composed of water droplets - liquid water, or water ice - tiny ice crystals. Either way, clouds are not invisible water vapor. Clouds can form as water vapor condenses to form tiny droplets of liquid water. These droplets can come together - coalesce - to form larger droplets. You've seen fog. Fog is a cloud at ground level. And if you've seen fog, then you've seen that clouds are composed of tiny water droplets suspended in air. Clouds can also be composed of ice crystals. (Cirrus clouds) In one case liquid water can freeze to form ice particles. It is more likely that water vapor undergoes "deposition", the opposite of sublimation. Sublimation is the process where a solid goes directly to the gas phase without going through the liquid phase. Deposition is the process where a gas goes directly from the gas phase to the solid phase.