It rains, or maybe hail storm or a snowstorm.
Clouds form in the sky when water vapor condenses into water droplets. This process happens when warm air rises, cools, and reaches its dew point, causing the water vapor to condense and form clouds.
When the water vapour condenses and turns into a liquid.
Cooler. The cloud forms because the water vapor condenses by cooling down. Thunderstorms occur because a warm, moist air mass is cooled by an incoming cold air mass. When the moist air gets chilled, the water vapor condenses to form clouds, resulting in rain.
Water vapor in the water cycle evaporates from bodies of water, rises into the atmosphere, cools and condenses to form clouds, and then falls back to the Earth's surface as precipitation in the form of rain, snow, sleet, or hail. This cycle of evaporation, condensation, and precipitation repeats continuously.
Water vapor condenses on a mirror because the mirror’s surface is cooler than the surrounding air, causing the water vapor in the air to lose heat and transform into liquid droplets on the mirror's surface. This happens due to the process of condensation, where the water vapor transitions from a gas to a liquid state.
it condenses
When water vapor condenses around dust particles a cloud is formed
it condenses on the ground to make dew
Cool breeze flows when this happens. The water vapor then condenses.
Clouds form in the sky when water vapor condenses into water droplets. This process happens when warm air rises, cools, and reaches its dew point, causing the water vapor to condense and form clouds.
Water vapor in air condenses into liquid water at the dew point temperature.
Water vapor turns to water droplets causing it to rain.
Kinetic energy
evaporation
This is a physical change. When water vapor in the air condenses to form clouds, it is a change in state from a gas (water vapor) to a liquid (water droplets). No new substances are formed.
As the air cools, it can contain less and less water vapor as a gas. So the vapor condenses and creates visible mist called fog, clouds, drizzle, and rain depending on where the water vapor condenses and how much of it condenses. The rain and drizzle forms as the mist groups together and creates the droplets and drops.
Water vapor condenses to form clouds when it reaches its dew point, which is the temperature at which air becomes saturated with water vapor. The water vapor then forms tiny water droplets or ice crystals, which come together to create clouds.