rain
precipitation
At least a 2 million droplets are in a raindrop
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.
Water molecules naturally adhere to other water molecules. As water vapor condenses in the air, the molecules collect into droplets until they are heavy enough to begin falling. Depending on the various weather conditions, these droplets can connect to other droplets before they reach the ground, thereby forming larger and larger drops, or they could evaporate before they reach the ground, returning to the gaseous state in the air.
They look like any other cloud. Clouds are almost all alike. Only the acidic clouds are different (They have acid in them, hens the name). P.S: Rain drops don't look like water droplets. They look like a blob of water falling.
precipitation
Individual droplets are so small, that they can stay suspended in the air. If the droplets combine into larger drops that are too heavy to stay suspended, they fall as raindrops.
At least a 2 million droplets are in a raindrop
well, they collect all together in the cloud and when it is full enough it all drops as precipitation
There would be 220 million drops.
It forms a cloud
It forms a cloud
Simple answer: They don't. Clouds ARE water - tiny, tiny droplets of water just like fog. If colder air moves into a cloud, it causes there to be even more water droplets forming. When the droplets get close enough together, they start touching and turning themselves into even larger droplets. Then the "even larger" water droplets touch, and make water drops . . . at some point in this process, the water droplets grow large enough that they are too heavy to stay where they are, and then they fall to the ground. This falling to the ground is what we call, "Rain".
If it happens in a cloud, the drops combine until too heavy, and it rains.
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.
It is very cold up there, and water droplets freeze into ice.
Water molecules naturally adhere to other water molecules. As water vapor condenses in the air, the molecules collect into droplets until they are heavy enough to begin falling. Depending on the various weather conditions, these droplets can connect to other droplets before they reach the ground, thereby forming larger and larger drops, or they could evaporate before they reach the ground, returning to the gaseous state in the air.