Water evaporated from the ocean or land by the sun. Some vapor comes from industry and jet planes.
no the Earth does so the clouds stay in one spot and the Earth rotatates
Yes, the source of all clouds and precipitation is water vapor. Water evaporates from bodies of water, such as oceans, lakes, and rivers, and rises into the atmosphere where it cools and condenses to form clouds. When the conditions are right, these clouds release precipitation in the form of rain, snow, sleet, or hail.
Clouds are not an energy source themselves, but they can affect the amount of solar energy reaching the Earth's surface by reflecting, absorbing, and scattering sunlight. This can impact the overall availability of solar energy for technologies like solar panels.
Water, special seawater. It get evaporated and form cloud
No, the clouds are not directly attached to the earth's movement. Clouds are formed due to condensation of water vapor in the atmosphere, and their movement is influenced by wind patterns. So while the earth's movement can indirectly impact wind patterns, the clouds themselves do not move in sync with the earth.
There will be no earth there will only clouds
Yes. There are ALWAYS clouds somewhere on Earth.
Clouds are the source of rain,through what is known as the water cycle, where fog is low hanging clouds picking up water to the clouds from water sources.
In Earth, the clouds has rain, snow, and hail. But in Neptune, they clouds doesn't has snow or hail.
Nearly all clouds and weather systems occur in the troposphere, which is the lowest layer of the Earth's atmosphere. This layer extends from the Earth's surface up to an average height of about 11 miles (17 kilometers). It is where most of Earth's weather phenomena, such as clouds, storms, and precipitation, take place.
The layer of the atmosphere that contains most of the clouds and all of the Earth's weather is the troposphere. The troposphere is the lowest layer of the atmosphere, extending from the Earth's surface up to about 10-15 kilometers in altitude. This is where most of the weather phenomena, such as clouds, precipitation, and atmospheric disturbances, occur.
The sun