Evaporation
The hydrosphere is right above the atmosphere, and it doesn't really do much except make clouds. The thing that helps make clouds is: - the temperatures in that area -mixed with the water vapor that evaporates from earth's oceans, rivers, and lakes.
If you're talking about the basic water cycle, starting in the ocean, water evaporates into vapor (Evaporation) rising up until it reaches it's the dew point, then the water condenses and travel towards higher ground, sometimes it travels as far as sea level ground (Condensation), when it reaches that heavy point where the clouds is too heavy to carry the water it drops taking about 10-15 minutes from the clouds to reaches the surface of the Earth if clouds are in the strato zone (Precipitation).
i think your saying are clouds made out of water and yes they are.
Water evaporates into clouds through a process called evaporation, where heat from the sun warms bodies of water, causing the liquid to turn into water vapor. This vapor rises into the atmosphere, where it cools and condenses into tiny droplets, forming clouds. The process is essential for the water cycle, helping to distribute moisture and regulate climate by transporting water from the Earth's surface into the atmosphere. Ultimately, this cycle supports ecosystems and provides precipitation essential for life on Earth.
Because we have a thing called an atmosphere. Air pressure, temperature, and other factors condense water particles that form small water droplets that form tiny ice crystals that group up with other ice crystals that form what we see as clouds.
Energy from the Sun.
Clouds are formed in the atmosphere.
Condensation
No, clouds are not nonrenewable. Clouds are continuously forming and dissipating as water evaporates from the Earth's surface, rises into the atmosphere, and then condenses into droplets or ice crystals to create clouds. This cyclical process makes clouds a renewable natural phenomenon.
Water in the soil is absorbed by plants through their roots and released as water vapor through a process called transpiration. This water vapor then enters the atmosphere where it can condense and form clouds. Additionally, water in the soil can also evaporate directly into the atmosphere if the soil is wet and exposed to sunlight and wind.
An example of the atmosphere acting as a system is the water cycle. In this process, water evaporates from the Earth's surface, forming clouds in the atmosphere. These clouds eventually lead to precipitation, returning water to the ground, where it can again evaporate. This continuous cycle illustrates how different components of the atmosphere interact and exchange energy and matter, functioning as an interconnected system.
When water evaporates into the air, you may see clouds forming in the sky. It can also lead to increased humidity and possibly precipitation if the conditions are right.
When water evaporates into the sky it begins to get cooler and physically changes to condensation or clouds. This is important!!:)
Water evaporates from Earth's surface into the atmosphere, forming clouds. These clouds then release precipitation in the form of rain or snow, which returns water to Earth's surface. Some of this water is absorbed by the ground, while some flows back into rivers, lakes, and oceans, starting the cycle again.
The hydrosphere is right above the atmosphere, and it doesn't really do much except make clouds. The thing that helps make clouds is: - the temperatures in that area -mixed with the water vapor that evaporates from earth's oceans, rivers, and lakes.
Water from the hydrosphere is evaporated into the atmosphere through processes like evaporation and transpiration. This water vapor then condenses to form clouds and eventually falls back to the Earth's surface as precipitation. This completes the cycle of water moving from the hydrosphere to the atmosphere and back again.
Rain occurs because of the condensation of water in clouds. When water evaporates from the earth, it collects in the atmosphere into clouds. When the water in clouds condenses to the point of liquifying, it rains.