Rothiemurchus
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Are clouds held in the air by archimedes principle or by rising heat or something else?
Not quite. Clouds do float and the effect is buoyancy.Strictly speaking clouds don't float ( they aren't boyant in air ),
This is true.Thermal motion of all the air molecules hitting the water droplets at random stops them settling out
http://asd-www.larc.nasa.gov/edu_act/clouds.htmlThe most common ways to lift a parcel of air are: buoyancy, topographic lifting, and convergence. Buoyant lifting results from surface heating. This is a common manner of cloud formation in the summer. Buoyancy lifting is also called convection and occurs when local warm areas heat the air near the surface (fig 31a). The warm air is less dense than the surrounding air and rises. This rising air will eventually cool to its dew point and form a fair-weather cumulus cloud.
mgb_phys said:Strictly speaking clouds don't float ( they aren't boyant in air ), there are 2 mechanisms keeping them up;
Astronuc said:Not quite. Clouds do float and the effect is buoyancy.
mathman said:This may be oversimplifying, but water (mol.wt.=18) molecules are lighter than oxygen (32) or nitrogen (28) molecules.
BillJx said:What I always find fascinating is the sharpness of the air interfaces - - the flat bottoms of clouds, the razor-straight frost line on a hillside, the horizontal layer of smoke in a bar etc. I don't really get why the layers are so sharply separated.
BillJx said:the razor-straight frost line on a hillside