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2007-03-16 06:49:48 · 3 answers · asked by Anonymous in Environment

3 answers

A cloud is a cell of air that has a different temperature and/or humidity to the surrounding air, and is such that some of the water vapour in the air has condensed out into tiny water droplets that are usually frozen, and which are sufficiently small that they remain suspended in the air instead of falling to the ground. The droplets make the air opaque, which is why you see the cloud as white or grey.

2007-03-16 06:56:29 · answer #1 · answered by Always Hopeful 6 · 0 0

What are clouds?
Clouds are made up of millions of tiny droplets of water and ice.

Each of these droplets of water is smaller than a grain of flour, and they are so light that they can float on air.

When pilots in airplanes fly through clouds they can see nothing but clouds. It's like being inside a thick fog or a steamy room

How are clouds made?
There are 3 conditions that are necessary for cloud formation: lifting (evaporation), cooling and condensation.

We can prove that dry air absorbs water by evaporation. [link proof] Therefore it makes sense to say that the air around us contains water vapour (water vapour is a gas). When this air rises it gets cooler and the water vapour condenses (it turns into tiny drops of water) to form clouds. Did you realise that condensation is the reverse of evaporation?

But what makes the air rise?
Convection. Think about the saying that 'hot air rises'. When the sun's rays heat the earth this also heats the air just above the ground and this hot air rises.

Sometimes cold, heavy air pushes its way under warm air and forces it to rise.

Another reason why air rises is when it has to pass over hills and mountains (this is why mountains often have clouds on top of them).

2007-03-16 06:58:54 · answer #2 · answered by Indiana Frenchman 7 · 0 0

check this site . .
http://www.cloudappreciationsociety.org/
. . and buy the book 'The Cloudspotter's Guide' by Gavin Pretor-Pinney

2007-03-16 07:02:51 · answer #3 · answered by dougie boy 3 · 0 1

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