Want this question answered?
The tiny water droplets in the sky form clouds.
There altitude is less than 2000 meters
No, thunderstorm clouds are not made up of tiny droplets of carbon dioxide. Carbon dioxide is in abundance throughout the atmosphere and it is why the Earth is suffering from global warming,
Precipitation. Usually it is rain, but it could be sleet, snow, or hail.
Clouds are formed when water vapour in the air is cooled and condenses as part of watercycle.clouds consist of billions of tiny water droplets (and even ice crystals) floating in the sky and appear in variety of shapes and sizes depending on how and where they are formed.however,there are three main types of clouds.Water evaporates from lakes, rivers and oceans as well as forests. The water vapour rises into the sky. The temperature is lower as height increases and the water molecules start to condense into tiny droplets. We see these droplets as fog when they are close to the Earth but as clouds when they are above us in a layer of cold air. As more and more water vapour condenses the clouds lose their white colour and become darker until eventually the water droplets are big enough to fall back to the Earth without evaporating.Water vapour
precipitation (:
precipitation (:
Liquid water droplets that have condensed from atmospheric vapor. When enough of these droplets have accumulated in the clouds, they become heavy enough to fall to earth.
they are droplets of water ( the water that drops from clouds are 0.02 mm an average rain drop is 2 mm ) or they are droplets of ice (like hail)
Why do the clouds droplets not fall to the earth
Water vapor (that has evaporated) condenses into cloud droplets in the cooler atmosphere. Many of these droplets form clouds. When enough water molecules with the clouds form together, they become too heavy for the upward flowing air to keep them in the cloud. The droplets then fall back down to earth as precipitation, rain being the most common form.
Fallen Earth was created on 2009-09-22.
Clouds and fog are made up of super tiny water droplets. Largely, heat rising from the earth keeps the droplets up in the air, but even without that, the droplets are so light that they would fall very, very slowly, indeed - so slow that a person could not see it. Sometimes the droplets join each other and become heavy enough to noticably fall and become rain. (Or hail, sleet, snow)
condensation
rain
droplets need to get big and heavy before they fall
The tiny water droplets in the sky form clouds.