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2007-01-04 04:03:21 · 8 answers · asked by Dilly 1 in Environment

8 answers

It gets exhausted ---

What made up the cloud came down as rain - so nothing is left ultimatley - a cloud is basically made of water droplets that settle over condensation nuclei....which are particles in the air

once these water droplets (along with the condensation nulcei) fall as rain - nothing is lkeft and the matter that made the cloud is exhausted

2007-01-04 04:11:08 · answer #1 · answered by honey007rmsas 4 · 0 0

They usually still exist just after a rain. Rain happens when the temperature changes to a point that the cloud can no longer hold the moisture in vapor form, so it becomes liquid. The tiny liquid particles cling together and form droplets. It stops raining when enough moisture has been released for the remaining vaporized water to remain stable at that temperature. Of course over time, all of the vapor can dissipate but that doesn't usually happen right after a storm because there's still too much moisture in the air.

2007-01-04 04:08:18 · answer #2 · answered by SDTerp 5 · 0 0

Clouds are condensed water, composed of droplets so small that they "float" on air because of the friction against it is enough to keep them up. When there's too much water in the air, this dorplets grow until they weigh enough to precipitate towards the earth (rain).
So rain is the water of which clouds were made of. After the rain, the cloud either isn't there anymore or only some of it remains (the droplets that didn't grow enough). The rest is in the ground

2007-01-04 04:08:16 · answer #3 · answered by carlospvog 3 · 0 0

"Even though they sometimes look as if you could walk on them, clouds are actually a collection of billions of tiny water droplets, ice crystals, or mixtures of both. As air rises into the upper atmosphere, it cools. When this happens, the water vapor that is present in the air reaches saturation and begins to form very small droplets. The droplets begin to slowly fall. As they reach the lower part of the cloud they evaporate. Therefore a cloud is a continuous cycle of droplets falling and then evaporating. Clouds are classified according to their appearance and height. Let's start from the ground and work our way up..."

2007-01-04 04:05:40 · answer #4 · answered by :] 2 · 0 0

the clouds are the rain itself...in case there are a bit left in the atmosphere, the wind can blow it towards to other places, having 2 results: either it regathers vapor to form a nimbus cloud or it joins with other raincloud.

2007-01-04 04:12:47 · answer #5 · answered by shirubiah 3 · 0 0

clouds travels round the world until back to the same country and this system calls clouds cycle

2007-01-04 04:15:57 · answer #6 · answered by jesuswholemylife2020 1 · 0 0

They reduce in size until they either cease to exist or get moved on by wind

2007-01-04 04:10:16 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

they move on and dissolve

2007-01-04 04:05:25 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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