Yes, clouds are basically water.
For rain to fall, water vapor in the atmosphere must condense into water droplets, typically by cooling as air rises. When these water droplets become large enough, they fall to the ground as raindrops. Other factors like the presence of clouds and atmospheric instability also play a role in the formation of rain.
Yes, rain typically falls from cumulonimbus clouds, which are large, towering clouds associated with thunderstorms and heavy precipitation. These clouds are capable of producing intense rainfall, hail, and lightning.
The clouds are rain. all the clouds are is water vapor(thats a fancy name for microscopic water) the water is so SMALL in the clouds it is too light to fall. then when it is heavy enough to fall you get rain
All rain falls from clouds, but clouds that you see which don't have rain falling from them are just not raining because the cloud has not become saturated with water vapour. When it does become so, it will rain.
Rain forms when water droplets in clouds combine and grow large enough to fall to the ground. These water droplets typically come from condensation of water vapor in the air, which collects in the clouds and eventually falls as rain when the droplets become heavy enough.
yes
When a storm forms, warm air rises and cools, causing water vapor to condense into clouds. As the clouds grow, the water droplets combine and become heavy enough to fall as rain.
Before water vapor falls from clouds as rain, it must first condense into water droplets. This condensation occurs when the water vapor in the air cools and reaches its dew point, at which point it forms visible clouds. Once the water droplets in the clouds combine and grow large enough, they fall to the ground as precipitation in the form of rain.
Clouds form when water starts to condense, so clouds eventually grow until they rain themselves to death-clouds mean rain.
For rain to fall, water vapor in the atmosphere must condense into water droplets, typically by cooling as air rises. When these water droplets become large enough, they fall to the ground as raindrops. Other factors like the presence of clouds and atmospheric instability also play a role in the formation of rain.
It will condense into clouds and rain and the cycle will start over.
An increase in relative humidity indicates that the air is close to saturation, meaning it has a high moisture content. This can lead to the formation of clouds and possibly rain, as the moisture in the air is more likely to condense and fall back to the ground as precipitation.
Before precipitation can fall to Earth's surface, water vapor in the atmosphere must condense and form clouds. Once the clouds reach a point where they can no longer hold the condensed water, precipitation such as rain, snow, sleet, or hail will fall to the surface.
Yes, rain typically falls from cumulonimbus clouds, which are large, towering clouds associated with thunderstorms and heavy precipitation. These clouds are capable of producing intense rainfall, hail, and lightning.
First the sun evaporates rain/puddles or other liquids, then these liquids and/or dirt particles that were also evaporated condense (condensation) into clouds. After the clouds evaporate enough water condense into a full cloud, depending on the weather it would then precipitate into rain, sleet, snow, or hail. Now for the second question, if the sun didn't evaporate water there would be no water to form rain clouds. If there were no condensation there would be no rain clouds (there would be clouds just not rain clouds) and if there were no precipitation there would be no rain.
It will condense into clouds and rain and the cycle will start over.
rain: the clouds collect eough water from the ocean to the clouds and the clouds get too heavy and have to fall down. hail: the water from the clouds get frozen and turn into snow