Water evaporates from a body of water (turns into a gas form), the water vapour rises like a regular gas would, then it condenses in the sky into a cloud. That is part of the water life cycle, that is also why the earth will never run out of water.
Rain and snow are not forms of condensation. Rain is liquid water that falls from clouds, while snow is ice crystals that form in clouds and fall to the ground. Condensation is the process where water vapor in the air turns into liquid water on a surface due to cooling.
Before water vapor falls from clouds as rain, it must first condense into water droplets. This condensation occurs when the water vapor in the air cools and reaches its dew point, at which point it forms visible clouds. Once the water droplets in the clouds combine and grow large enough, they fall to the ground as precipitation in the form of rain.
Rain forms when water droplets in clouds combine and grow in size. When these droplets become too heavy to remain in the air, they fall to the ground as precipitation. The size of the rain droplets can vary depending on the atmospheric conditions and the temperature of the air.
Rain travels with the wind. As the wind blows the clouds, the rainfall moves with the clouds as the clouds are the source of the rain. As the rain hits the ground, it follows the path of least resistance as it is pulled by gravity. If the rain has nowhere to go, the water will pool and form a flood. Most of the rainwater that falls on land goes to the creeks, streams and rivers that flow either to lakes or to the ocean, where the water will evaporate and form clouds that produce rain. And this cycle continues day in and day out.
Clouds play a crucial role in the water cycle by holding water vapor that eventually falls as rain. After rain, clouds continue to hold moisture, which can evaporate and form new clouds. This process helps replenish groundwater by providing a continuous source of precipitation that seeps into the ground, eventually recharging underground aquifers.
Evaporated water forms again clouds and rain.
Rain forms when water droplets in clouds combine and grow large enough to fall to the ground. These water droplets typically come from condensation of water vapor in the air, which collects in the clouds and eventually falls as rain when the droplets become heavy enough.
water vapor, which then condenses as it cools with the rising altitude and falls as rain
Condensation. That is how. Water evaporates, forms into clouds, and when they get too full of water, it falls back down as rain. White clouds never rain. Gray clouds will sometimes rain. The darker the cloud is, the more likely they will rain. The grayest/ darkest ones will undoubtedly also storm.
It forms clouds in the sky and then, when the clouds are heavy enough, they fall as rain
Rain clouds are formed by the evaporation of water from lakes, rivers and the atmosphere. When this evaporation takes place it will form clouds that are very in the air, and therefore they release a variety of water forms such as rain, snow or sleet depending on the current temperature.
It evaporates, and forms clouds. Clouds blow over land, and rain. Rain runs into rivers, which run into the lake.
rain
All rain falls from clouds, but clouds that you see which don't have rain falling from them are just not raining because the cloud has not become saturated with water vapour. When it does become so, it will rain.
When a storm forms, warm air rises and cools, causing water vapor to condense into clouds. As the clouds grow, the water droplets combine and become heavy enough to fall as rain.
Rain is caused when the precipitation forms into clouds and the clouds get heavy and if it is cold enough then it will snow or if it is warm the it will rain.
Water evaporates into water vapor which condenses in the atmosphere to form clouds, when there is sufficient condensation within the clouds the water vapor start to combine into larger units until they are massive enough to fall to the ground as rain.