A precipitate is a solid that is formed when two aqueous solutions are combined. Different ions from the two solutions combine. The precipitate forms because it is insoluble in water.
it pecipitate as rain
rain, hail, sleet, snow
2HNO3+2Ag=2AgNO3+h2 the pecipitate AgNO3 is white in colour like yoghurt or curd
A common precipitate is a solid that forms when two solutions react chemically, leading to an insoluble product. An example is barium sulfate (BaSO₄), which precipitates when barium chloride (BaCl₂) reacts with sodium sulfate (Na₂SO₄). Precipitates are often used in qualitative analysis to identify the presence of specific ions in a solution.
Ice crystals don't precipitate. Precipitation of crystals happens when you create a supersaturated solution, and you do THAT by heating a solvent, adding enough solute to make a saturated solution at that temperature, filtering out the undissolved solute, and letting the solution cool. Ice crystals form.