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  • Plants need it to grow, animals need it to survive, and the human body needs it to stay hydrated and keep functioning.

  • Water is an essential building block to life and it comes to us from above.

  • Rainwater fills streams, rivers, and lakes.

  • It carries with it the potential for life to flourish.

  • It can turn an arid desert in to an oasis; convert a stream to white water rapids in the monsoon season, and breathe life into the harshest places on earth.

  • So how do clouds form to keep giving us the essential H2O we need?

  • That's what we'll find out today, in this episode of The Infographics Show: Why Does It Rain?

  • Clouds are possibly the most interesting and beautiful of all weather phenomena.

  • They form in a wide variety of shapes and sizes, but are all made of the same thing...water.

  • Though we may not notice it, almost all the air around us is moist because it contains water in the form of vapor.

  • You can't see the water vapor, because it's a gas, but it is still there.

  • Water can be either solid as ice, liquid as water, or gas, which is a vapor.

  • Vapor has no smell and it's invisible.

  • But you can feel it.

  • Imagine a hot and sticky day in summer, or a cold foggy day in winter.

  • Those sensations are water vapor.

  • If you put steam or vapor under the microscope, you would see millions of tiny water droplets floating in the air.

  • This is the same process that forms clouds - millions of tiny water droplets condensing out of the air to form liquid water.

  • But why does water condense out of air and become visible as a cloud?

  • Warm air holds water vapor better than cool air, so when warm air starts to cool, it can no longer hold as much of the vapor.

  • The extra water vapor has to go somewhere.

  • It condenses out as water.

  • To see this in action, go outside and stare up at a cloud.

  • Be patient but keep watching the cloud, especially it's edges.

  • You will see the edges change, either growing larger or getting smaller.

  • This is cloud formation in action.

  • The cloud grows because more of those water droplets are condensing out of the air.

  • And when it shrinks, you are seeing the droplets evaporating, or changing from visible liquid water into invisible water vapor.

  • But not every cloud has rain pouring out of it.

  • So, how does the formation of a cloud become actual rain?

  • For rain to be produced, the water condensing in the clouds has to become so heavy that it will fall to Earth,

  • or else the tiny droplets will just stay suspended in the cloud, in the same way we see fog just hang there.

  • To become heavier, the droplets need to grow into drops, and to do this, they have to acquire more water and become larger.

  • As the droplets collide with each other, some will combine and become larger,

  • and others will grow as more water condenses out the air directly into the droplet, until they become condensed and heavy enough to fall to the earth as rain.

  • Or if the weather is very cold, the tiny droplets freeze and fall down as snow, hail, or sleet.

  • So, there you gothat's what a cloud is, and how it creates rain.

  • But what causes the air to cool in the first place?

  • We mentioned earlier, that cooling the air reduces its ability to hold water, and triggers the formation of water droplets.

  • To create clouds, and to have rain, the air has to be cooled.

  • Most of the science journals we looked at state that there are three main ways in which this happens.

  • These are known as relief rain, frontal rain, and convectional rain.

  • Let's take a look at how each of these work.

  • Relief rain, sometimes referred to as orographic rain, is caused when air is forced to cool as it rises over a physical obstruction, such as a mountain range, or big hills.

  • As the warm air rises over the obstruction, it cools, and clouds form.

  • Relief rain is common in mountainous areas where it can lead to more extreme local rainfall patterns, because the rain clouds form very quickly.

  • Often one side of a mountain is warm and sunny, and the other side, only a few hundred feet away, is wet and rainy.

  • Frontal rain develops when two bodies of air, an area of warm air and an area of cool air, meet.

  • The colder air mass is heavier than the warmer air, and so the lighter, warmer air rises over the top of the heavier, cooler air.

  • As the warmer air rises over the cold air it also starts to cool, condensation occurs, and the cloud forming process begins, leading to rain.

  • Where frontal rain develops, skies are typically grey and mostly covered by clouds.

  • And finally convectional rain.

  • On a warm day, the sunshine heats up the ground, and the air above is also warmed, causing it to expand and rise.

  • As it continues to warm, it absorbs more water because, as we mentioned before, warm air can hold more water than cool air.

  • But as it rises, the temperature starts to drop again, because the atmosphere gets cooler as you go higher - by roughly one degree centigrade for every 100m of altitude.

  • When the air reaches a height where the temperature forces the water vapor to start condensing, clouds begin to form.

  • Clouds formed this way are called cumulus clouds, or cumulonimbus clouds, and they usually lead to very heavy rain, often with thunder and lightning.

  • Convectional rain is experienced at the end of a hot summer day, like when the air feels heavy and we can tell a storm is brewing.

  • So, that's the process of clouds forming.

  • Clouds cool the Earth's surface by reflecting sunlight, and they supply water that is essential for the survival of plants, animals, and us humans.

  • Have you experienced extreme or severe rain, when the water we need turns from friend to foe?

  • Describe the worst storm you've ever been in, in the comments below.

  • Also, be sure to check out our other video called What Is Life Like In The Smallest Country In The World?

  • Thanks for watching, and, as always, don't forget to like, share, and subscribe.

  • See you next time!

Plants need it to grow, animals need it to survive, and the human body needs it to stay hydrated and keep functioning.

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