Why are Clouds White? Raman Effect & Rayleigh Scattering

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Clouds appear white due to the combination of light scattering from water droplets of varying sizes, which reflect all colors of light equally. Smaller droplets scatter blue light, while larger droplets scatter red, and together they produce the white color of clouds. The Rayleigh scattering effect explains why the sky is blue, as it scatters shorter wavelengths of light more effectively than longer ones. The incident light is indeed white, and the scattered light maintains its wavelength, resulting in the observed colors. The discussion also touches on the buoyancy of clouds, which are held aloft by air currents and the balance of forces within the atmosphere.
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In one place I read that since the particles are big they reflect white light as is. But in another I read that they are made up of water droplets of varying sizes so,

small droplets: make blue
medium droplets: make green
larger droplets: make red

...and together they combine to make a white cloud. Which one is correct?

And also, under Raman effect it's given that in Rayleigh scattering the scattered light is the same as that of the incident light. But how. The sky is blue. This is because blue light is scattered. But the incident light is white? Or do they mean that the scattered light's wavelength does not change?
 
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I've only read that water droplets are larger than the wavelengths of visible light and therefore reflect or scatter all of it equally.
 
diffuse reflection off water droplets.
 
May I join in along a sideline.

Clouds consist of water droplets. What holds the cloud up in the air?
 
Thanks Charmar.
 
So I know that electrons are fundamental, there's no 'material' that makes them up, it's like talking about a colour itself rather than a car or a flower. Now protons and neutrons and quarks and whatever other stuff is there fundamentally, I want someone to kind of teach me these, I have a lot of questions that books might not give the answer in the way I understand. Thanks
I am attempting to use a Raman TruScan with a 785 nm laser to read a material for identification purposes. The material causes too much fluorescence and doesn’t not produce a good signal. However another lab is able to produce a good signal consistently using the same Raman model and sample material. What would be the reason for the different results between instruments?
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