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yes, it condenses. thats why it rains. clouds become too heavy and water droplets (rain) fall. if the air is cold as it falls it can become snow or hail.
Simple answer: They don't. Clouds ARE water - tiny, tiny droplets of water just like fog. If colder air moves into a cloud, it causes there to be even more water droplets forming. When the droplets get close enough together, they start touching and turning themselves into even larger droplets. Then the "even larger" water droplets touch, and make water drops . . . at some point in this process, the water droplets grow large enough that they are too heavy to stay where they are, and then they fall to the ground. This falling to the ground is what we call, "Rain".
Because clouds occur when water condenses from water vapour to tiny water droplets. Water condenses when it is cold enough, and higher up in the atmosphere, it is colder.
Colder, much colder.
Colder
precipitation condensation and rain
Condense
Precipitation is the process of water droplets or ice crystals falling from the sky.
When you get out of shower, there are water droplets on your body. Some of the body's heat is loss to them before they evaporate. So we felt colder. YP
yes, it condenses. thats why it rains. clouds become too heavy and water droplets (rain) fall. if the air is cold as it falls it can become snow or hail.
That is the correct spelling of "chillier" (more chilly).
Dew is formed by condensation - the water from the air around the ground becomes heavy enough to form into droplets on any areas which are colder than the air.Rain is formed when water droplets condense above the ground and fall.
Simple answer: They don't. Clouds ARE water - tiny, tiny droplets of water just like fog. If colder air moves into a cloud, it causes there to be even more water droplets forming. When the droplets get close enough together, they start touching and turning themselves into even larger droplets. Then the "even larger" water droplets touch, and make water drops . . . at some point in this process, the water droplets grow large enough that they are too heavy to stay where they are, and then they fall to the ground. This falling to the ground is what we call, "Rain".
This is strait from the apex questions. ITS DEW POINT - C.
Condensation/Hot Moist Air Meeting Colder Air
Clouds are made up of very small water droplets which are suspended in the air. Usually water droplets are in the warm section of the cloud, if the air continues to cool, the small droplets will join together to form larger droplets or ice crystals. The ice crystals are usually higher and as you may know the higher you go the colder it gets so that's how ice crystals are formed.
Warmer air can carry more "dissolved" water(water wapour) than colder air can. When you breathe out moist, body-temperature air into colder air that excess water vapour condenses into tiny droplets, which create the fog that you see.