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Vaporisation, or evaporation.
It changes back into water, which is called condensation. That makes it into a cloud.
Evaporation. The heat of the sun causes water to turn into air molecules and rise into the sky. Once they rise and cool off, the water vapor condenses into clouds
The stratosphere is the layer above the troposphere (where we live). The ozone layer is found in the lower stratosphere. The stratosphere is the lowest layer where temperature increases with increasing altitude.
The stratosphere is very dry; air there contains little water vapor. Because of this, few clouds are found in this layer; almost all clouds occur in the lower, more humid troposphere. Polar stratospheric clouds (PSCs) are the exception. PSCs appear in the lower stratosphere near the poles in winter. They are only found in certain latitudes and temperatures.
The stratosphere contains almost no water vapor.
no water vapor is found normally in clouds luiquid
yes
The amount of water vapor in the stratosphere is much lower than in the lower atmosphere. The condensation of water vapor is what creates clouds (and rain, hail, snow, and other forms of precipitation) Also because weather occurs in the troposphere, and clouds are formed from water vapor, which is part of the water cycle, which is part of weather
Vaporisation, or evaporation.
bob the builder
Yes. There is latent heat release when vapor condenses.
the water vapor would rise up in the sky and then it will become cool, then it will form a cloud
It changes back into water, which is called condensation. That makes it into a cloud.
The stratosphere affects the weather by contributing to the water vapor. This helps to create precipitation and move heat around the atmosphere.
Positive water vapor feedback is when CO2 is burned into the atmosphere, causing the temperatures to rise. Higher, warmer temps mean MORE water vapor. Water Vapor is also a gas that traps heat. The amount of water vapor feedback is important to climate science circles. -Learned from USA Today, 2004
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