drizzle
The very fine rain is called mist or drizzle. It consists of very small water droplets that fall slowly and lightly from the sky.
When water droplets fall to the earth, it is called rain.
That is called rain. Rain is formed when water droplets in clouds combine to create larger droplets that fall to the ground due to gravity.
airRain are water droplets that fall from the sky.If it is very cold, or there are layers of vary cold air that the rain passes through on the way down, the water droplets can become snow or balls of hail.
Water droplets fall to Earth as precipitation when they accumulate in clouds and become too heavy to remain suspended. This can happen through a process called coalescence, where smaller droplets merge together to form larger droplets that eventually fall as rain, snow, sleet, or hail depending on the atmospheric conditions.
The very fine rain is called mist or drizzle. It consists of very small water droplets that fall slowly and lightly from the sky.
airRain are water droplets that fall from the sky.If it is very cold, or there are layers of vary cold air that the rain passes through on the way down, the water droplets can become snow or balls of hail.
When water droplets fall to the earth, it is called rain.
airRain are water droplets that fall from the sky.If it is very cold, or there are layers of vary cold air that the rain passes through on the way down, the water droplets can become snow or balls of hail.
Clouds and fog are made up of super tiny water droplets. Largely, heat rising from the earth keeps the droplets up in the air, but even without that, the droplets are so light that they would fall very, very slowly, indeed - so slow that a person could not see it. Sometimes the droplets join each other and become heavy enough to noticably fall and become rain. (Or hail, sleet, snow)
That is called rain. Rain is formed when water droplets in clouds combine to create larger droplets that fall to the ground due to gravity.
Drizzle is caused by very small water droplets in the atmosphere that are small enough to remain suspended. It typically occurs in light precipitation and tends to fall slowly and steadily from low-lying stratus clouds.
All water droplets in the air is different just like when they fall down.
Those are raindrops, formed when water vapor in the clouds condenses and combines into larger droplets that become heavy enough to fall to the ground.
they get bigger because the water droplets are cold and there is also water vapour in the air which is hotand when they meet the water vapour changes back to water droplets which then combine with the water droplets falling from the thunder cloud!!
They do, it is called rain. But, they start off as very, very small molecules of water. They slowly start to cling together. Often, it takes something for the water to cling onto to start the accumulation process, a tiny spec of dust for instance. Until then, the winds and their absolute lightness keeps them in the air. Once they are big enough, the wind will no longer keep them in the air and they fall to the ground.
Precipitation