Smog was so named because it can form when moisture in the air combines with smoke particles!
by:joshua
In both fog and cloud, the dispersed phase is a liquid and the dispersion medium is air (gas). The only difference between them is that the fog is formed in the region close to earth while clouds are formed in the upper layer of the atmosphere.
Condensation can also be seen on the surface of a cold drink glass, in the bathroom after a hot shower, on a mirror when you take a hot bath, and even on the surface of cold food items when left out in a warm room.
Condensation of the water vapor in clouds creates precipitation, which includes rain, snow, and various forms of frozen water that fall from the sky, returning water to the environment. In some cases, surface clouds (fog) can condense directly to provide liquid water.
Rain is a form of condensation that occurs when water vapor in the atmosphere condenses into water droplets and falls to the ground.
Clouds, fog or mist.
Dew on grass Clouds are formed by condensation Fog
When you see steam fog or clouds, you are seeing water in its gaseous state. Steam fog occurs when cold air comes into contact with warm water vapor, causing condensation to form into fog. Clouds are also formed by the condensation of water vapor in the atmosphere.
no clouds are formed from dust particules and water
Snow is not a type of condensation fog. Condensation fog includes cloud and dew, where water vapor condenses in the air to form droplets that can then accumulate to form clouds or settle on surfaces as dew. Snow is formed by the direct transformation of water vapor into ice crystals in the atmosphere.
The process that changes water vapor into clouds of fog is called condensation. When warm, moist air comes into contact with cooler air or a cooler surface, the water vapor in the air condenses into tiny water droplets, forming fog.
Condensation occurs as water vapor cools in the atmosphere, leading to the formation of clouds or fog.
Clouds and fog. Some of this becomes liquid as dew and condensation.
Condensation in the atmosphere creates clouds, which are formed when water vapor in the air cools and condenses into tiny water droplets or ice crystals. These clouds play a critical role in Earth's climate and weather systems by affecting temperature, precipitation, and energy balance.
Fog and clouds in higher altitudes are alike in that they are both composed of tiny water droplets or ice crystals suspended in the air. They both can reduce visibility and may be formed through similar processes, such as cooling of air or condensation of water vapor. Additionally, both fog and high-altitude clouds play a role in the Earth's water cycle and weather systems.
Clouds, dew, and fog are the results of condensation. Condensation is the process by which gas turns into liquid. It is just like when you are drinking a cold glass of lemonade; the outside starts to get wet with little droplets. And no, there are not holes in the glass; it's just the condensation in action.
Examples of condensation include water droplets forming on the outside of a cold glass of water, fog forming on a cool morning, and clouds forming in the atmosphere when warm air rises and cools down.
condensation does not for clouds. water vapor comes up to the clouds and turns back to water. then it falls as precipitation. which is fog , sleet, snow, rain and hail. and fog is a low cloud.