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Water in the Atmosphere The Water Cycle HUMIDITY… A measure of the amount of water vapor in the air Relative Humidity: % of water vapor in the air compared to the maximum amount the air can hold Warm air can hold more water vapor than cool air Evaporation slows down when the relative humidity is high How Clouds Form… When water vapor in the air becomes liquid water or ice crystals Condensation: molecules of water vapor become liquid water Dew Point: temperature at which condensation begins Cumulus Clouds… Look like fluffy, rounded piles of cotton Cumulus means “heap” or “mass” Indicate fair weather Cumulonimbus clouds are towering with flat tops that produce thunderstorms Nimbus means “rain” Stratus Clouds… Form in flat layers Strato means “spread out” Cover all or most of sky Nimbostratus clouds may produce drizzle, rain, or snow Cirrus Clouds… Wispy, feathery clouds Form only at high levels – above 6 km Made mostly of ice crystals Cirrocumulus clouds look like rows of cotton balls and indicate that a storm is on its way Clouds based on Height… Alto- (means high): clouds that form between 2 & 6 km above Earth’s surface. – Altocumulus – Altostratus Fog: clouds that form at or near the ground – Forms when the ground cools at night after a warm, humid day. The ground cools the air just above it to the air’s dew point. The next morning’s sun “burns” the fog off as its water droplets evaporate