Water vapor droplets can become cloud droplets when the what reaches?
dew point is the correct answer
When the cloud reaches saturation level and the air can no longer hold the water vapor, small water droplets in the cloud combine to form larger droplets. When these droplets become heavy enough, they fall to the ground as precipitation, such as rain or snow.
They are made of bolth because they are vertically developed. The bottom is made of water, and as they develop higher, become ice.
billions of tiny droplets of water...
Clouds are made up of really tiny water droplets. Once they build up to be heavy enough, they fall! That is what makes rain fall!
Water falls from clouds in the form of rain because the droplets of water in the clouds grow too heavy to remain suspended in the air. This happens when the water droplets coalesce and become too large for the cloud's updrafts to keep them aloft, leading to them falling to the ground as precipitation.
Dew point
Water vapor droplets can become cloud droplets through a process called condensation. As the air cools and reaches its dew point temperature, water vapor condenses onto tiny particles in the atmosphere, forming cloud droplets. These droplets then collide and combine with each other to grow and eventually form clouds.
hail
Moisture falls from a cloud in the form of precipitation when water droplets in the cloud combine to form larger droplets, which become heavy enough to overcome the force of updrafts that keep them suspended. These larger droplets then fall to the ground due to gravity.
When you see a cloud, you are seeing water droplets, not water vapor. Clouds form when water vapor in the atmosphere cools and condenses into tiny liquid water droplets or ice crystals. These droplets cluster together, making the cloud visible. So, while the cloud originates from water vapor, what you see is actually the condensed water droplets.
The cool, dense, and heavy water droplets in the cloud eventually combine to form larger droplets or ice crystals. When these droplets or crystals become too heavy to be supported by the air currents in the cloud, they fall to the ground as precipitation, such as rain or snow.
When the cloud reaches saturation level and the air can no longer hold the water vapor, small water droplets in the cloud combine to form larger droplets. When these droplets become heavy enough, they fall to the ground as precipitation, such as rain or snow.
By definition, a cloud is microscopic water droplets. Brought down to earth level, a cloud is called "fog" - which is the same thing: microscopic water droplets.
No. A cloud is a mixture of mostly water droplets.
Cirrus clouds are not made out of water droplets.
Aerosols, such as dust, smoke, or pollution particles, act as nuclei for cloud droplets to form around in the atmosphere. These solid particles provide a surface for water vapor to condense onto, leading to the formation of cloud droplets.
cumulus clouds form layers with water droplets