They become Clouds that precipitation falls from.
Water in a puddle evaporates as energy from the sun heats it up. The evaporated water rises and cools in the atmosphere, eventually forming tiny water droplets that make up a cloud.
To separate the rays in a light beam and make a rainbow, you can use a prism or water droplets in the atmosphere. When light enters a prism, it is refracted at different angles depending on its wavelength, causing the different colors in the light spectrum to separate. Similarly, when sunlight passes through water droplets in the air, it is refracted and dispersed, creating a rainbow.
Yes, clouds are formed from water molecules that have evaporated from bodies of water on Earth. These molecules rise into the atmosphere and cool down, forming tiny liquid water droplets or ice crystals that make up a cloud.
Fog water is collected using special nets or mesh structures that capture water droplets from fog. This water can be used for drinking, irrigation, and other purposes by filtering and treating it to make it safe for use.
When the humidity reaches 100, the air is holding the maximum amount of water vapor it can hold at that temperature. This can lead to condensation, where water droplets form on surfaces, and can also make it feel very muggy and uncomfortable.
Water condenses to make clouds, that join together to form larger droplets. When these drops are heavy enough to fall, they return to the Earth's surface as rain, hail, or sleet. If clouds are made of ice particles instead of water drops, they can produce snow.Thus it is precpitation that takes place just after condensation
Simple answer: They don't. Clouds ARE water - tiny, tiny droplets of water just like fog. If colder air moves into a cloud, it causes there to be even more water droplets forming. When the droplets get close enough together, they start touching and turning themselves into even larger droplets. Then the "even larger" water droplets touch, and make water drops . . . at some point in this process, the water droplets grow large enough that they are too heavy to stay where they are, and then they fall to the ground. This falling to the ground is what we call, "Rain".
The technical term is... condensation.
Tiny water droplets come together due to surface tension and cohesion forces to form larger drops. This process is known as coalescence, where smaller droplets merge into larger ones to reduce their surface area and achieve a more stable configuration. This phenomenon is commonly observed in clouds and during rainfall.
Two atoms of hydrogen and one atom of oxygen.
Water forms droplets when it comes into contact with a surface due to surface tension. This is caused by the cohesive forces between water molecules, which make them stick together and form a spherical shape to minimize surface area.
Water droplets that are too heavy to float make precipitation such as rain, hail, or snow. When the water droplets become too heavy, they fall to the ground due to gravity.
It would take about 450 million droplets of fog to make a single tablespoon of water. Fog droplets are typically very small, around 10-15 micrometers in diameter.
Clouds are made up of very small water droplets which are suspended in the air. If the air continues to cool, the small droplets will join together to form larger droplets or ice crystals. Eventually the weight of the water drops or ice crystals may be heavy enough to make them fall as precipitation(rain, snow, hail or ice). The higher clouds which don't produce precipitation are formed of the crystals while the lower clouds which produce precipitation are formed of water droplets which are the melted crystals.
Snow is an ice crystal made from very small water droplets. If you are talking about the regular action of snow being created in the atmosphere, it doesn't come from water vapor. Water droplets in the air will condense from lowering temperatures and start to group together. Those droplets will merge with more droplets. This is repeated over and over until the water droplets become heavy enough to fall from the sky. As they do, they will freeze. Smaller ones will make small ice formations: snow. Bigger droplets will make things like slush and hail. All of these things are conceptually the same thing. The size of the ice is what determines the name.
The clouds rub together to create a static charge between the water droplets that make up the clouds, which then connects with the highest point for the shortest path to the ground as lightning.
Join together, unify!