water vapor
This process is called condensation. As warm air rises and cools, the water vapor it contains condenses into liquid droplets, forming clouds or fog.
Large masses of water vapor are called clouds. Clouds are formed when warm air rises and cools, causing the water vapor to condense into tiny water droplets or ice crystals.
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As air rises it becomes decompressed, which causes it to cool. This cooling can cause water vapor to condense, forming clouds.
When the sun rises, the warmth and light cause the dew to evaporate. As the temperature rises, the water droplets in the dew transform into water vapor and are released into the air.
Buoyancy.
The path water follows is called the water cycle. Water evaporates from the Earth's surface, rises into the air, condenses to form clouds, and then falls back to the Earth as precipitation in the form of rain or snow.
The water vapour rises to form clouds.
Water vapor
This process is called condensation. As warm air rises and cools, the water vapor it contains condenses into liquid droplets, forming clouds or fog.
Increases
The amount of water win the air will not change but the amount of water the air will hold rises as temp rises. Enter condensation.
The process is called adiabatic cooling. As warm air rises, it expands and cools down due to decreasing pressure, leading to water vapor condensing into liquid droplets, forming clouds.
it is condensation
Colder air blowing in from the sea to the land is called a "sea breeze".
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The process in which air rises and cools, causing water vapor to condense back into a liquid form is called "condensation." As the air rises, it expands and cools, reaching its dew point where condensation occurs, forming clouds or precipitation. This process is fundamental in the formation of rain and other forms of precipitation.