Gravity is the force that brings precipitation, such as rain or snow, to the ground. As precipitation falls through the atmosphere, gravity pulls it downward until it reaches the Earth's surface.
The force that brings someone back to the ground after jumping is the force of gravity. Gravity pulls downwards on the person, counteracting the force generated by their jump and causing them to descend back to the ground.
An example of a force is gravity. Gravity is the force that brings objects down to the ground and keeps planets in orbit around the sun.
The driving force of precipitation is the condensation of water vapor in the atmosphere. As air rises and cools, it reaches its dew point and water vapor condenses into tiny droplets or ice crystals, forming clouds. When these droplets coalesce and become heavy enough, they fall to the ground as precipitation in the form of rain, snow, sleet, or hail.
The action force is the force exerted by your feet on the ground. This force is the force that you apply to the ground when walking.
No. What brings rain down, gravity, is a force. Rain is simply water being pulled down by gravity in little drops from clouds in the sky.
Umm i believe its gravity...?
The one that keeps YOU on the ground
The force that brings someone back to the ground after jumping is the force of gravity. Gravity pulls downwards on the person, counteracting the force generated by their jump and causing them to descend back to the ground.
An example of a force is gravity. Gravity is the force that brings objects down to the ground and keeps planets in orbit around the sun.
"things" or precipitation (rain), drops toward the ground because of the gravity force pushing it downward.
Precipitation brings rain. It supplies water to humans.
When precipitation infiltrates the ground there is a possibility of flooding.
Precipitation brings water back to earth. It completes water cycle.
Precipitation that sinks into the ground is called Groundwater.
precipitation is the water that soaks downward due to the ground trickles
The driving force of precipitation is the condensation of water vapor in the atmosphere. As air rises and cools, it reaches its dew point and water vapor condenses into tiny droplets or ice crystals, forming clouds. When these droplets coalesce and become heavy enough, they fall to the ground as precipitation in the form of rain, snow, sleet, or hail.
The Atlantic Ocean