i think that clouds hold their water by saturation. so when the water gets more heavy then the cloud the water turns into droplets(rain). i know that this is not the best answer but at least i tried.
a cloud
it turns into a cloud
Clouds get their shape from the amount of air and water in them. These 2 elements form a cloud and it's shape.AnswerDepends of the temperature of the cloud, if the cloud have ice cristals, will be different than if it has only water vapor, or different percentage of both.
the clouds take in the evaporated water and rain or snow which is called precipitation
There is no beggining to this. It's called the water cycle. It's a cycle so there's no beggining and no end. It's like saying, which came first? The chicken or the egg? There is no start and no end. So I will just start at a random point in the water cycle. Precipitation happens and can fall in the form of rain, hail, sleet or snow. The rain, hail, sleet or snow then either runs off into rivers and lakes or soaks in to the ground. If it runs off then the ground is either saturated and can't hold anymore water or if the ground in non-pourous (non-pourous means made out of something that can't soak water eg. concrete). If it soaks in, it becomes ground water. Next, the sun evaporates the water in rivers, lakes, oceans ect. and the water in plants. The water vapour (which is the water as an invisible gas) rises and condenses. The vapour then joins with other droplets to make a large water droplet. That large droplet clings itself to a billion small dust particles and form a cloud. When the cloud can hold no more water, precipitation happens again and the cycle starts ALL OVER AGAIN!!!
they can both hold water..............
it rains .
When a cloud can no longer hold any more water, it has reached its saturation point, also known as 100% relative humidity. At this stage, the cloud's capacity to hold water vapor has been exceeded, leading to the release of water droplets in the form of precipitation such as rain, snow, or hail.
It may become a cumulunimbus cloud and rain as long as it can hold it.
No, if the cloud is lower it is most likely to contain more water vapor. Hint: look at rain clouds they are usually closer to the surface of the earth.
Water vapor droplets can become cloud droplets when the what reaches? dew point is the correct answer
No, a cloud formed in hot air is not denser than a cloud formed in cold air. Cloud formation is primarily determined by the saturation level of air, where warm air can hold more water vapor before condensation occurs. The density of the cloud itself depends more on the amount of water droplets or ice crystals present rather than the temperature of the air in which it formed.
because you have water which creates a cloud
because when water evaporates it forms a cloud full of water
The first energy level in the electron cloud can hold a maximum of 2 electrons.
a cloud
Cloud saturation refers to the point at which the air cannot hold any more water vapor, leading to the condensation of water vapor into tiny liquid droplets or ice crystals, forming clouds. This occurs when the relative humidity is 100%.