The water cycle
Clouds soil due to the accumulation of tiny water droplets or ice crystals around particles in the atmosphere, such as dust, smoke, or pollutants. These particles serve as nuclei for condensation to occur, leading to the formation of cloud droplets.
The transition from cloud to soil involves precipitation, where water droplets in the cloud combine to form larger droplets and eventually fall to the ground as rain, snow, sleet, or hail. Once the precipitation reaches the soil, it can infiltrate into the ground, replenishing groundwater reserves and providing moisture for plant growth.
The process of separating soil into its various soil particles and humus is called soil fractionation.
Fog is formed when water vapor condenses in a low lying cloud close to the ground, usually from moisture in lakes, oceans, rivers, plants, or soil. This process occurs when the air near the surface becomes saturated with water vapor and cools to the point of condensation.
When the air underneath a cloud becomes dry, the process of evaporation and condensation slows down. This can lead to less moisture being available for the cloud to form precipitation, resulting in the cloud dissipating or not producing rain.
Clouds soil due to the accumulation of tiny water droplets or ice crystals around particles in the atmosphere, such as dust, smoke, or pollutants. These particles serve as nuclei for condensation to occur, leading to the formation of cloud droplets.
How is a cloud named and who invented the process?
Fog is a cloud on the ground.
The transition from cloud to soil involves precipitation, where water droplets in the cloud combine to form larger droplets and eventually fall to the ground as rain, snow, sleet, or hail. Once the precipitation reaches the soil, it can infiltrate into the ground, replenishing groundwater reserves and providing moisture for plant growth.
The process of separating soil into its various soil particles and humus is called soil fractionation.
Fog is formed when water vapor condenses in a low lying cloud close to the ground, usually from moisture in lakes, oceans, rivers, plants, or soil. This process occurs when the air near the surface becomes saturated with water vapor and cools to the point of condensation.
When the air underneath a cloud becomes dry, the process of evaporation and condensation slows down. This can lead to less moisture being available for the cloud to form precipitation, resulting in the cloud dissipating or not producing rain.
Soil Erosion.
The process of water soaking into soil is known as infiltration. This is the movement of water from the surface into the soil or porous materials.
the cloud in atmmosphere and soil in lithosphere
solar energy
The process of fertilizing soil includes crop rotation, addition of humus and adding fertilizers.