Clouds are part of our water cycle, and our water cycle is the natural way of recycling our water so we can drink it again. Without the water cycle (and clouds), we would have no drinkable drinking water!
No. When clouds are gray, that means the sunlight can barely shine through them. Usually cirrus clouds are thin, white, and wispy. The clouds you are seeing are probably stratus or altocumulus clouds.
They are all types of clouds. Cirrus clouds are wispy, high-altitude clouds. Stratus clouds are low, layered clouds that can bring rain. Cumulus clouds are puffy, white clouds associated with fair weather. Cumulonimbus clouds are towering clouds that can produce thunderstorms and severe weather.
there were no clouds
one is coller
Clouds. But technically it is falling from the sky, from clouds in the sky.
true
Clouds are formed from water vapour - which is virtually invisible to radar.
Chemical detection alarms, chemical detection paper.
There are many fun and useful photo apps. I suggest adobe photoshop, sketchpad, paint or GIMP.
=there are 15 i have counted off of the internet so yeah i have also counted in the sky==here they are:==Cirrus clouds==Cirrostratus clouds==Cirrocumulus clouds==Altostratus clouds==Altocumulus clouds==Stratus clouds==Stratocumulus clouds==Nimbostratus clouds==Cumulus clouds==Cumulonimbus clouds==Mammatus clouds==Lenticular clouds==Fog==Contrails==Green Clouds=
Cumulus clouds, Stratus clouds and Cirrus clouds
The cirrus clouds, cirrocumulus clouds, cirrostratus clouds, and cumulonimbus clouds.
the 3 types of clouds are the following: Cumulus Clouds,Cirrus Clouds, and Stratus Clouds
The cirrus clouds, cirrocumulus clouds, cirrostratus clouds, and cumulonimbus clouds.
The cirrus clouds, cirrocumulus clouds, cirrostratus clouds, and cumulonimbus clouds.
The submillimeter wavelength range, specifically around 1 millimeter, has been proven to be the most useful in studying star birth in dense molecular clouds. This range allows astronomers to peer through the dense dust clouds where stars are forming, revealing critical details about the early stages of star formation. By observing at submillimeter wavelengths, astronomers can study the cool dust and gas that are signatures of young stellar objects.
No. Cumulus clouds are fair-weather clouds most of the time. Storm clouds are cumulonimbus.