clouds will form from precipitation of all the water that was on the ground, rising into the air, but you can't see it. then all the clouds are full of water and when it's too full, it starts to rain
Clouds contain snow when the temperature is low enough for water vapor to freeze into ice crystals within the cloud. These ice crystals then come together to form snowflakes, which eventually fall to the ground when they become heavy enough.
Clouds responsible for precipitation are typically nimbostratus clouds, which are thick, dark clouds that cover the sky and bring steady rainfall. Cumulonimbus clouds, which are tall and dense, can also produce heavy rain showers or thunderstorms. Both types of clouds contain water droplets that eventually coalesce and fall as precipitation when they become too heavy to remain suspended in the atmosphere.
An example of precipitation is rain falling from clouds in the sky. When water droplets in clouds become too heavy to remain suspended, they fall to the ground as precipitation. Other forms of precipitation include snow, sleet, and hail.
Another new moon and another full moon. And if you catch it just right, all of the other phases are in there too.
it precipitates (rains)
Hail forms from clouds when ice crystals in clouds become too large.
Raindrops
The scientific term for when clouds become too heavy and release precipitation in the form of rain, snow, sleet, or hail is "precipitation." This process occurs when the moisture in the clouds condenses and falls to the ground due to gravity.
Water falls from clouds in the form of rain because the droplets of water in the clouds grow too heavy to remain suspended in the air. This happens when the water droplets coalesce and become too large for the cloud's updrafts to keep them aloft, leading to them falling to the ground as precipitation.
When raindrops become too heavy, they overcome the upward force of air resistance and gravity pulls them down towards the ground. This results in precipitation, where the raindrops fall from the clouds and reach the Earth's surface.
Cloud formation typically comes first before precipitation. Moisture in the air condenses to form clouds as the air rises and cools. Once the clouds become saturated with water droplets or ice crystals, precipitation can occur when the droplets or crystals become heavy enough to fall from the clouds.
you will die
The amount of moisture shining through the clouds gives you a sign that the clouds aren't too full or water
Clouds are made of vapor, but when the vapor gets too dense, droplets form, fall, and become rain.
Droplets that become too heavy to remain suspended in the air fall out of the clouds as precipitation, such as rain, snow, sleet, or hail.
Hail typically comes from cumulonimbus clouds, which are large, towering clouds associated with thunderstorms. These clouds have strong updrafts that can keep hailstones suspended until they become too heavy and fall to the ground.