It must first evaporate and then it must condense into a cloud. As soon as the water droplets get too heavy, then they fall as rain.
When the air temperature in the cloud decreases below the freezing point of water vapor, the water vapor molecules slow down and come together to form ice crystals. This process is called nucleation, where the vapor turns into tiny particles of ice, which then grow into larger ice crystals to form clouds.
Condensation. The water vapor goes up into the sky forming clouds. When the clouds become too heavy with vapor, the water falls back down to earth as precipitation.
Precipitation typically releases energy as it condenses from water vapor to form clouds and eventually falls as rain or snow. This energy is initially absorbed from the surroundings during the evaporation process and is released when the water vapor condenses.
Yes, that process is called precipitation. It occurs when water droplets in the clouds combine and grow larger until they become heavy enough to fall to the ground as rain, snow, sleet, or hail.
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.
The clouds are formed by water vapor evaporating from the ocean. The water vapor condenses and falls again as rain (or snow) thereby completing the water cycle.
Water vapor typically lingers in the atmosphere for a few days before condensing into clouds or precipitation.
The solute in rain clouds is water vapor. The solvent is the air in the atmosphere. When the water vapor in the cloud condenses into liquid water droplets, it falls to the ground as rain.
Water vapor typically remains in the air for a few days before it condenses and forms clouds or precipitation.
The water evaporates, the vapor rises, goes in to the clouds , and falls again as rain or snow.
Water vapor in the air returns to the surface through the process of condensation, where the vapor cools and turns back into liquid water. This can happen when the temperature drops, causing the vapor to condense and form clouds, eventually leading to precipitation in the form of rain or snow that falls back to the Earth's surface.
Water vapor condenses into tiny droplets in the atmosphere to form clouds. When these droplets come together and grow in size, they eventually become heavy enough to fall as rain.
Before clouds can form, air must become saturated with water vapor. This means that the air reaches its dew point, causing the water vapor to condense into tiny water droplets. These droplets then accumulate and form clouds in the sky.
the rain cycle. the water is evaporates and turns into clouds (water vapor) then condenses and falls back down again
When the air temperature in the cloud decreases below the freezing point of water vapor, the water vapor molecules slow down and come together to form ice crystals. This process is called nucleation, where the vapor turns into tiny particles of ice, which then grow into larger ice crystals to form clouds.
When water vapor condenses, it falls back to Earth as precipitation, which can take the form of rain, snow, sleet, or hail. This is a crucial part of the water cycle, where water is evaporated from the Earth's surface, form clouds, and then falls back as precipitation to replenish water sources.
All clouds are made of water vapor.