Condensation
The forming of water droplets and clouds in the atmosphere is referred to as condensation.
The last answer was just illogical. Condensation is water droplets in the water cycle.
Clouds are made up of tiny droplets of water that have condensed on dust particles in the atmosphere.
Water in soil evaporates into a gas, then collects and turns dense forming clouds. Clouds are technically a part of the atmosphere.
"evaporation is what happens" no... that's condensation....
The forming of water droplets and clouds in the atmosphere is referred to as condensation.
Condensation
The last answer was just illogical. Condensation is water droplets in the water cycle.
Clouds are visible form of moisture. They can be liquid droplets or frozen droplets of water or any other chemical suspended in the atmosphere.
condensation
Water vapor in the cool air condenses in to tiny droplets of water, forming clouds.
Evaporation
Clouds are made up of tiny droplets of water that have condensed on dust particles in the atmosphere.
Water in soil evaporates into a gas, then collects and turns dense forming clouds. Clouds are technically a part of the atmosphere.
Rain? Clouds are also made out of water droplets (or ice crystals).
The warm water vapour loses heat to the sky and condenses into water droplets, forming clouds.
Clouds are composed of either ice or water droplets, depending on their height and the temperature of the atmosphere. Because the water droplets in the atmosphere are so small, they can remain in liquid form in temperatures up to -22 oF (-30 oC) forming clouds consisting of water droplets, while higher clouds at lower temperatures will consist of ice crystals. Clouds form when invisible water vapor in the air condenses into visible droplets or crystals, due either to an increase in the amount of water in the air, or due to air cooling to its due point. Cloud formation is caused by surface heating, air being forced over hills or mountains (topographic or orographic forcing), frontal systems, convergence of air, or turbulance.