there are different forms of water that fall from the clouds, one is,which everyone knows is rain.it is the basic form of precipitation. the others are hail stones snowflakes,snow usually when the temperatures are pretty low.
That is precipitation, which is any form of water - liquid or solid - that falls from the atmosphere to the Earth's surface.
clouds are made up of evaporated water and since there is no water on the moon there cannot be any clouds
Precipitation is rain, snow, sleet, hail, or any other water that falls from the sky. In meteorology, precipitation (also known as one of the classes of hydrometeors, which are atmospheric water phenomena) is any product of the condensation of atmospheric water vapor that is deposited on the Earth's surface. Precipitation is generated in clouds. When water vapor droplets in clouds become so large that updrafts within the clouds can no longer support them, the water will fall to the earth under the force of gravity.
CloudsThe rain comes from the clouds which has water in the form of water vapour .These water vapour condenses due to low temperature in the atmosphere and come to earth as rain or in any other way of precipitation
The weather term that best describes rain, sleet, and snow is "precipitation." Precipitation refers to any form of water, liquid or solid, that falls from clouds and reaches the ground. This includes various types of moisture, such as rain (liquid water), sleet (ice pellets), and snow (frozen water crystals).
In solid form: sleet, hail, snow In liquid form: rain, drizzle, fog
Precipitation is any form of water, liquid or solid, that falls from the atmosphere to the Earth's surface. It includes rain, sleet, snow, and hail. Precipitation plays a crucial role in the water cycle and is essential for sustaining life on Earth.
These forms given the general term precipitation.
any water that fallls to the ground evaperates into the clouds
When hail falls from clouds, it is called a hailstorm or hail shower. Hail is formed when updrafts in thunderstorms carry raindrops upward into extremely cold areas of the atmosphere, where they freeze into ice pellets before falling back to the ground.
Yes. The clouds are made of vapirized water. When the clouds get too dense and heavy, drops of water fall as rain. The sun comes out and more water evaporates. And the cycle continues.
I think what you mean to say is "What falls from the CLOUDS in the winter." Though It's just a guess. The sky really doesn't do much by itself in any season, much less be the "container" for the changing temperatures, whereas clouds in the winter (depending on where you live) will drop snow (pieces of frozen water) if it's cold enough or rain (non-frozen water) if it's warm enough.