snow
Frozen water vapor that falls to earth as flakes is called snow.
Snow is frozen water vapor that falls to Earth as flakes.
Rain, snow, and hail are all types of precipitation. Rain is liquid water falling from clouds, snow is frozen water vapor that falls in flakes, and hail is frozen raindrops that are larger and formed in thunderstorms.
You may be referring to snow. If you come from a climate where you have never seen it, it is water vapor frozen into whitish-colored ice crystals, and in winter, it falls in flakes onto the ground.
Yes snow when melted would be distilled, you woul however have to keep it in a glass or plastic container.
Lacy flakes of frozen water are snowflakes. Snowflakes form when water vapor in the air condenses and freezes into intricate ice crystals, creating the unique shapes and patterns we see falling from the sky.
You would call it snow.
Atmospheric water vapor frozen into ice crystals and falling in light white flakes or lying on the ground as a white layer.
When water vapor condenses, it falls back to Earth as precipitation, which can take the form of rain, snow, sleet, or hail. This is a crucial part of the water cycle, where water is evaporated from the Earth's surface, form clouds, and then falls back as precipitation to replenish water sources.
The rain cycle, Water vapor rises, cools , condenses into drops, and falls back to earth.
Solid white flakes of water that fall from the sky are known as snow. Snow forms when water vapor in the atmosphere freezes into ice crystals and falls to the ground.
No, a psychrometer is a tool used to measure relative humidity, not the amount of water vapor that condenses and falls to Earth. The amount of water vapor that condenses and falls as precipitation can be measured using instruments such as rain gauges or weather radars.