rain, hail, sleet, snow
it pecipitate as rain
2HNO3+2Ag=2AgNO3+h2 the pecipitate AgNO3 is white in colour like yoghurt or curd
A common precipitate is a solid that forms when two solutions react chemically, leading to an insoluble product. An example is barium sulfate (BaSO₄), which precipitates when barium chloride (BaCl₂) reacts with sodium sulfate (Na₂SO₄). Precipitates are often used in qualitative analysis to identify the presence of specific ions in a solution.
A precipitate is a solid that forms from a solution during a chemical reaction. It is typically formed when two soluble reactants combine to form an insoluble product, which then separates out as a solid. The solid precipitate can be filtered out from the remaining solution.
Ice crystals don't precipitate. Precipitation of crystals happens when you create a supersaturated solution, and you do THAT by heating a solvent, adding enough solute to make a saturated solution at that temperature, filtering out the undissolved solute, and letting the solution cool. Ice crystals form.