not sure srry!
Clouds are made up of tiny water droplets or ice crystals. These droplets form when water vapor in the air condenses onto particles such as dust or salt. The different types of clouds can vary in altitude, thickness, and composition.
Clouds are simply very small water droplets suspended in air.
Water droplets form on tiny particles in the atmosphere, such as dust or salt particles. These particles serve as nuclei for water vapor to condense onto, eventually forming clouds.
Particles of salt and dust in the air can serve as nuclei around which water vapor can condense, leading to the formation of cloud droplets. These particles provide a surface for water vapor to condense onto, promoting the growth of cloud droplets and ultimately the formation of clouds.
Clouds form because of the water cycle(evaporation, condensation, precipitation) mainly condensation. Because the water that evaporated, it condensated and formed into a cloud. CONDENTAION!!!!!!! Sorry about the spelling. XD
it removes salt water by the salt water absorbing by the sun . And the sun absorbs the water and then bring it to the clouds and make rain, the rain goes in the water and its saltwater yet again
it removes salt water by the salt water absorbing by the sun . And the sun absorbs the water and then bring it to the clouds and make rain, the rain goes in the water and its saltwater yet again
When salt water evaporates, the water molecules leave the solution as vapor, while the salt remains behind in the remaining liquid. The vapor rises and eventually condenses into clouds, forming precipitation that falls as freshwater. This process leaves the salt behind, leading to the concentration of salt in the remaining water.
Salt water evaporates from the ocean's surface, leaving behind the salt. The water vapor rises into the atmosphere and eventually condenses to form clouds. When the clouds cool and the water droplets become too heavy to stay aloft, they fall as precipitation, which is freshwater rain since the salt is left behind during the evaporation process.
Rain is formed when water droplets in the clouds combine and become heavy enough to fall to the ground. The salt particles in the ocean water are left behind when the water evaporates to form clouds, so the rain that falls is typically fresh water. Salt water is not generally carried up into the atmosphere where clouds form.
The salt in the clouds eventually returns to the Earth's surface through precipitation, such as rain or snow. As the water droplets in the clouds condense and form precipitation, they carry the salt with them back to the ground.
All clouds are made of fresh water. The salt in the sea doesn't evaporate. The cloud is a collection of tiny water droplets.
They are formed through the water cycle. The clouds accumulate water then the clouds dump the water (rain). The water that lands on the ground and picks up dirt and salt. The runoff water goes into the lakes, rivers, and oceans which is then sucked back up into the clouds. When the water is taken back up to the clouds, the salt is left behind because is too heavy. Also, when the runoff water accumulates on the ground, the water dries up and the salt is left behind which will be collected the next time it rains.
Air + Salt Water = Fog + Salt Salt Water = Water + Stone Stone = Fire + Earth
It doesn't because the rain is fresh water. Salt can't evaporate with water so salt mantains where it is. Or to the simple minded people, Salt doesn't go into clouds or rain.
first of all, the proper grammer isIs stream water fresh water or salt water? now to answer your question;streams come from rivers, that come from mountainsthe mountains snow melts to fill the riverssnow is made in clouds, clouds get their water from the oceanthe ocean is salt water, but the clouds cant pick up saltso it is fresh water
Clouds are visible masses of condensed water droplets or ice crystals floating in the atmosphere, while water vapor is the invisible gaseous form of water that is present in the air. Clouds form when water vapor in the air condenses around particles like dust or salt nuclei.