No, clouds are little droplets of liquid water (or ice). Those small droplets or ice crystals grow together to become rain drops or snow or hail etc.
True. Clouds and precipitation are formed when water vapor in the atmosphere condenses into liquid water droplets or ice crystals.
Yes, rain occurs when water vapor in the atmosphere condenses into liquid droplets. This process can happen due to cooling of the air, which causes the water vapor to turn into water droplets that eventually fall as precipitation.
Cumulonimbus clouds, those can cause supercell storms (rotating thunderstorms) and then severe weather, such as deadly lightning, tornadoes, large hail, straight line winds, and even flooding.Another cloud is Mammatus. Mammatus hangs beneath the anvil of a mature thunder cloud. It produces severe weather especially tornadoes. I read this from a book so this is true.
Yes, it is a kind of Precipitation.PrecipitationPrecipitation is a process of water cycle, when the water vapour rises, it will cool and turn to be droplets by condensation, the falling of the product of condensation is precipitation, such as rain, hail, snow etc.Yes
True. Frozen rain and snow are both formed from frozen water droplets, although they have distinct formation processes. Frozen rain, also known as sleet, occurs when raindrops freeze before reaching the ground. Snow forms when water vapor in the atmosphere freezes directly into ice crystals.
Yes, clouds are formed when air containing water vapor rises, cools, and condenses into water droplets or ice crystals. This process of condensation is essential for cloud formation.
True. Clouds and precipitation are formed when water vapor in the atmosphere condenses into liquid water droplets or ice crystals.
False. Hail can fall outside the area directly below the cumulonimbus cloud in which it formed, especially in cases of strong winds that can carry hail for some distance from the storm.
Water droplets in clouds are small liquid particles that form when water vapor in the air condenses around tiny particles called cloud condensation nuclei. These droplets can collide and combine to form larger droplets, eventually leading to precipitation. The size of the water droplets in clouds determines whether they remain suspended in the cloud or fall as rain.
Yes, rain occurs when water vapor in the atmosphere condenses into liquid droplets. This process can happen due to cooling of the air, which causes the water vapor to turn into water droplets that eventually fall as precipitation.
Yes that is true
The scientific answer: True. The sun formed about 4.6 billion years ago when a cloud composed primarily of hydrogen and helium with some heavier elements collapsed, igniting nuclear fusion. The creationist answer: False. On the first day God said let their be light. Genesis 1:3
Yes, clouds form when water vapor in the air condenses to form liquid water droplets or ice crystals around tiny particles called cloud condensation nuclei. This process happens when air rises, cools, and reaches its saturation point, causing the water vapor to change into visible cloud droplets.
Cumulonimbus clouds, those can cause supercell storms (rotating thunderstorms) and then severe weather, such as deadly lightning, tornadoes, large hail, straight line winds, and even flooding.Another cloud is Mammatus. Mammatus hangs beneath the anvil of a mature thunder cloud. It produces severe weather especially tornadoes. I read this from a book so this is true.
This is true because as air is forced to rise over the mountain range, it cools and condenses, leading to the formation of clouds and precipitation. This phenomenon is known as orographic precipitation.
Yes, it is a kind of Precipitation.PrecipitationPrecipitation is a process of water cycle, when the water vapour rises, it will cool and turn to be droplets by condensation, the falling of the product of condensation is precipitation, such as rain, hail, snow etc.Yes
Not necessarily, though it can imply that. On an otherwise clear night (no real cloud cover), few stars visible means a lot of haze or milkiness in the atmosphere. That implies a lot of water vapor, and further implies (does not guarantee) rain is on the way.