There is lot of water on the earth in sea,ponds,etc. because of heating due to sunlight or other causes it is converted into steam and moves upward
then after condensing it is collected in the form of clouds.
The droplets of water outside the glass likely came from condensation. When warm air comes into contact with a colder surface, such as the glass, the air cools down and can no longer hold as much moisture. This excess moisture then forms droplets on the cooler surface, which is the condensation you see on the outside of the glass.
Floating water droplets are called mist or spray. They are tiny droplets of water suspended in the air.
The last answer was just illogical. Condensation is water droplets in the water cycle.
Both water droplets and droplets from volcanoes are part of the water cycle. Water droplets form from condensation when water vapor in the air cools and changes phase. Droplets from volcanoes are created from the ejected molten rock, ash, and gases that cool and solidify in the atmosphere.
be cues it tiny water droplets
ice droplets
Cirrus clouds are not made out of water droplets.
Water vapor droplets can become cloud droplets when the what reaches? dew point is the correct answer
they get bigger because the water droplets are cold and there is also water vapour in the air which is hotand when they meet the water vapour changes back to water droplets which then combine with the water droplets falling from the thunder cloud!!
This is because the air around the tumbler contains water vapour in it. When these water vapour came in contact with the cold, they contact with cold water, loses energy and converted into liquid state, which we see as water droplets.
When you see a cloud, you are seeing water droplets, not water vapor. Clouds form when water vapor in the atmosphere cools and condenses into tiny liquid water droplets or ice crystals. These droplets cluster together, making the cloud visible. So, while the cloud originates from water vapor, what you see is actually the condensed water droplets.
cumulus clouds form layers with water droplets