Acid Rain
Sulfur oxides can combine with water vapor in the atmosphere to form sulfuric acid, which contributes to acid rain. They can also combine with other air pollutants to form particulate matter, which can have adverse effects on human health and the environment.
Oxides of sulfur and nitrogen that combine with water vapor can cause acid rain. This occurs when these oxides react with water in the atmosphere to form sulfuric acid and nitric acid, which then fall to the ground in precipitation, damaging plants, aquatic ecosystems, and infrastructure.
acid precipatation
During evaporation, liquid water changes into water vapor due to heat energy. As the water vapor rises, it cools and condenses to form clouds. Eventually, the water droplets in the clouds combine and fall back to the Earth's surface as precipitation.
When water boils, bubbles form due to the release of water vapor from the liquid. These bubbles contain water vapor, not air. The water itself does not disappear; it is transformed into water vapor, which you see as bubbles.
yeah its true
water vapors combine together in the air. They form clouds.
Water vapor changing into rain is called condensation. This is when the water vapor in the atmosphere cools down and transforms into liquid water droplets, which then combine to form raindrops.
the water vapours combine to form clouds and the fall as rain again.
To form new substances.
It just acts like a gas : just part of the atmosphere.
Water vapor is water in the form of a gas.
Oxygen. Nitrogen also helps ozone form (as long as water vapor is not around).
Sulfur oxides can combine with water vapor in the atmosphere to form sulfuric acid, which contributes to acid rain. They can also combine with other air pollutants to form particulate matter, which can have adverse effects on human health and the environment.
Oxides of sulfur and nitrogen that combine with water vapor can cause acid rain. This occurs when these oxides react with water in the atmosphere to form sulfuric acid and nitric acid, which then fall to the ground in precipitation, damaging plants, aquatic ecosystems, and infrastructure.
Water vapor is important because it creates clouds and it's water molecules combine to form water droplets that can either fall to the ground as rain, or freeze and fall to the ground as sleet, snow, or hail.
When water vapor rises, it cools and condenses into liquid water droplets, leading to the formation of clouds. If the cooling continues, the droplets may combine to form larger droplets and eventually fall as precipitation in the form of rain, snow, hail, or sleet.