Smog
Dust in the atmosphere attract water vapor which gathers together to form clouds.
Clouds form when water droplets or ice crystals condense around tiny particles in the atmosphere, such as dust or smoke. These droplets or crystals then come together and accumulate to form visible masses of clouds. The appearance of clouds can vary greatly depending on factors like altitude, moisture levels, and air currents.
As the gases go higher in the atmosphere they start to compose or join together at some point which causes them to change since there is mixture of more than one gas, sometimes they form a different element when certain gases form
Clouds form when water vapor in the atmosphere cools and condenses into tiny water droplets or ice crystals. This process typically occurs when warm, moist air rises and cools, allowing the water vapor to transition from a gas to a liquid state. As these droplets cluster together, they become visible as clouds. Factors such as temperature, pressure, and humidity play crucial roles in cloud formation.
Rain clouds form when warm, moist air rises and cools in the atmosphere. As the air cools, water vapor condenses into tiny water droplets or ice crystals, depending on the temperature. These droplets cluster together to form clouds, and when they become large enough, they fall to the ground as precipitation, such as rain. This process is part of the water cycle, driven by solar energy and atmospheric conditions.
sds
smoke + fog = smog
Smoke and fog together generally form smog.
Dust in the atmosphere attract water vapor which gathers together to form clouds.
water vapors combine together in the air. They form clouds.
Smoke is not a form of energy.
Its molecules become heated.
Anything in the form of tiny particles that can float in the atmosphere is an aerosol. This can be fine drops of liquid, like water vapour, or particles of dust, as are thrown up by a volcano erupting.Common aerosols in the atmosphere are:Inorganic: dust, smoke, sea salt, waterOrganic: pollen, spores, bacteriaAnthropogenic (man-made): smoke, ash, dust (from burning), aerosol spray can emissions, cigarette smoke, soot from car exhausts.
Dislocation
"Smog" is formed from the words "smoke" and "fog". It typically refers to a type of air pollution that results from the combination of smoke and fog in urban areas.
Water vapor condenses into tiny droplets in the atmosphere to form clouds. When these droplets come together and grow in size, they eventually become heavy enough to fall as rain.
it helps to form all the clouds together to make it rain in areas that need it