air and water
Clouds are at their coldest point and the air has to be reached its saturation.
The main characteristics of clouds are their elevation, and their density.
Clouds form when warm, moist air rises and cools, causing water vapor to condense into liquid droplets. The two requirements for this process are moisture in the air and a decrease in temperature to reach the dew point where condensation can occur.
Cirrus Clouds Cumulus Clouds
Clouds are classified based on their appearance and height in the atmosphere. Appearance classifications include stratus (layered clouds), cumulus (puffy clouds), and cirrus (wispy clouds). Height classifications are categorized as low-level, mid-level, and high-level clouds depending on the altitude they form at.
Water vapour and heat. Wind is not necessarily needed to form clouds.
Clouds are at their coldest point and the air has to be reached its saturation.
Two kinds of clouds made by humans are contrails, which form behind airplanes as a result of water vapor in the aircraft exhaust condensing, and pyrocumulus clouds, which form above large wildfires due to the intense heat convection caused by the fire.
cumulonimbus
Clouds are formed from three things: dust, air, and water. You need dust so the water vapor does not condense and fall to the ground as precipitation.
Dark clouds overhead and a sudden cold wind.
The main characteristics of clouds are their elevation, and their density.
Clouds form when warm, moist air rises and cools, causing water vapor to condense into liquid droplets. The two requirements for this process are moisture in the air and a decrease in temperature to reach the dew point where condensation can occur.
You actually kinda need three things to create a blizzard. One, you need cold air(below freezing) to make snow. Two, moisture, to form clouds and precipitation. Lastly, three, you need rising warm air to form clouds and cause precipitation.
Cirrus Clouds Cumulus Clouds
Clouds are classified based on their appearance and height in the atmosphere. Appearance classifications include stratus (layered clouds), cumulus (puffy clouds), and cirrus (wispy clouds). Height classifications are categorized as low-level, mid-level, and high-level clouds depending on the altitude they form at.
what is the form you would use the word curiously to compare two things