Floating water droplets are called mist or spray. They are tiny droplets of water suspended in the air.
Condensed water droplets held suspended in the air are known as fog. Fog forms when the air near the ground becomes saturated with water vapor, causing the water vapor to condense into tiny droplets that linger in the air.
water vapour go up into the clouds as a gas causing the clouds to get heavy thus releasing water droplets
The water droplets themselves are just water droplets, precipitates, runoff.They got there through condensation, the change of a gas state back to a liquid state, and the reverse of vaporization.
The tiny water droplets in the sky form clouds.
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!!
cumulus clouds form layers with water droplets
By definition, a cloud is microscopic water droplets. Brought down to earth level, a cloud is called "fog" - which is the same thing: microscopic water droplets.
water vapor change into water droplets when are at a low temperature. when the water vapors are at a low tempertaure, the particles of water come closer to each other and they form droplets of water.
Yes, tiny water droplets forming at the spout of a kettle is typically due to condensation. When the hot water vapor comes into contact with the cooler spout, it cools down and condenses into the water droplets that you see.