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It's commonly accepted that clouds are tiny droplets of moisture that small air currents swirl and bump around, getting denser and denser until clouds form. Once the air currents are insufficiently powerful enough to hold the larger droplets aloft anymore, they fall to the ground as rain (assuming they don't evaporate before they reach the ground).1) Does that really make sense? That trillions of gallons/billions of pounds of water are simply held aloft by air?2) Why doesn't fog freeze? It can be in the 20s (F) and yet there can be fog. Not ice pellets in the air - liquid water.
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