Yes. Fog is like a cloud in the sky
A fog is basically a cloud hovering at ground level.
Yes, fog is a ground level cloud.
They are quite similar.Clouds are formed more higher up and are much thicker.Fog is formed lower down and is not as thick as a cloud.They are the same. Fog is a very low cloud. They can be the same density.The scientific terminoly for fog is = Fog is a cloud that is in contact with the ground. The only difference is the ground but a cloud may be considered partly fog; for example, the part of a cloud that is suspended in the air above the ground is not considered fog but the part of the cloud that comes in contact with higher ground is considered fog.
When air is cooled to the dew point near the ground, it forms a stratus cloud called fog. Fog is a type of low-lying cloud that reduces visibility at the Earth's surface.
Mist or fog.
Fog looks like cloud but only on the ground not the sky.Like clouds ! Clouds and fog are both made up of tiny water-droplets, fog is just cloud that's close to the ground.
A fog is basically a cloud hovering at ground level.
Fog is a cloud on the ground.
Just the opposite. Fog nearly touches the Earth; it is low in the sky.
A stratus cloud
Yes, fog is a ground level cloud.
It would feel like a heavy fog.
Fog is just a cloud that is low enough to touch the earth's surface. Yea fog is a cloud.
When a cloud touches the ground, it is known as fog. Fog occurs when the air near the ground cools and reaches its dew point, causing water droplets to condense and create a cloud-like appearance at the surface.
You can feel a cloud when you are in fog
Fog rises when sunlight warms the air enough to bring up the temperature of air and fog cloud. Sun also lowers the condensation saturation. The fog does not clear, but the entire fog-cloud rises and goes on to just be a cloud in the sky.
Fog machines mimic what happens in nature. It needs sustained cool air and saturated moisture and a fan to blow the cloud outward. Because of temperature in the cloud and the room, the fog hugs the floor. To make it go away, they turn off the machine and let the room temp begin to warm the fog, decease the moisture, and make the fog "lighter". It rises. As it rises, it becomes warmer, until there is no evidence of fog or "cloud". If outside, the fog density rises into the sky where it just behaves like any other cloud.