Condensation
When moist warm air rises and cools, it reaches its dew point and condenses into tiny water droplets or ice crystals, forming a cloud. This process is known as condensation or cloud formation.
A tornadic vortex that is developing but has not yet reached the ground is called a funnel cloud.
The process of a tornado forming is called tornado genesis. Usually a tornado is a funnel cloud before it touches down.
no
Yes, snowflakes forming in a cloud conserve mass. The water molecules in the cloud are simply rearranged into the solid crystalline structure of a snowflake, without any loss of mass during the process.
The visible cloud of dust and gas in space is called a nebula. Nebulas are often regions where new stars are forming, and they can vary in size, shape, and color.
It's called in-cloud or cloud-to-cloud lightning.
Strong tornadoes typically descend from a wall cloud.
The atom where we are most likely to find an electron. this area is called the electron cloud.
Before a storm develops into a tornado, it typically forms a rotating wall cloud. This wall cloud can often be seen beneath a thunderstorm and is a key indicator of a possible tornado forming. It is important to monitor the situation closely and take appropriate precautions if a wall cloud is observed.
No, the wall cloud is a lowered section of the cloud base from which a tornado or funnel cloud descends. The dark cloud at the base of a tornado is called the debris cloud.
The low-altitude billowy cloud is called cumulus cloud.