Condensation
Chat with our AI personalities
When water droplets gather to form clouds, it is called condensation. This process occurs when warm, moist air rises and cools, causing the water vapor to condense into liquid droplets that accumulate and form clouds in the atmosphere.
The process in which clouds are formed in the water cycle is called condensation. This occurs when warm, moist air rises, cools, and condenses into tiny water droplets or ice crystals that gather to form clouds.
Clouds form when water droplets condense around tiny particles called cloud condensation nuclei, which can be dust, pollution, or salt crystals in the atmosphere. These particles provide a surface for water vapor to gather and form droplets, eventually leading to the formation of clouds.
Water droplets and clouds form through a process called condensation, where water vapor in the air changes into liquid droplets as it cools. This can happen when warm air rises, cools, and reaches its dew point, causing the vapor to condense onto tiny particles like dust or salt in the atmosphere. As more droplets gather, they form clouds.
That is called rain. Rain is formed when water droplets in clouds combine to create larger droplets that fall to the ground due to gravity.
A large concentration of tiny water droplets suspended in the air is called a cloud. Clouds form when water vapor condenses into liquid water droplets around tiny particles in the atmosphere.