Science

8th

grade

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Clouds

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15 questions

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  • 1. Multiple Choice
    30 seconds
    1 pt

    Clouds are made up of water droplets, ice crystals or both. Through evaporation and transpiration, water vapor enters the air around us. As the sun warms Earth’s surface, heat is transferred into the air and water vapor in the atmosphere. The warm air rises away from Earth’s surface and begins to cool. The colder the air gets, the less water vapor it can hold. Once it gets cold enough, a process called supersaturation causes the water vapor to transfer back to a liquid or solid state. This transition from water vapor to water droplets or ice crystals is known as condensation. These droplets or ice crystals form around particles of dust, smoke, sea salt or pollution to form condensation nuclei. This step repeats over and over as condensation nuclei bunch together and become visible. The result of this process is a cloud.


    Which of the following best describes the relationship between condensation nuclei and clouds?

    One condensation nucleus expands to form a cloud.

    Many condensation nuclei cause clouds to disappear.

    Many condensation nuclei bunch together to form a cloud.

    One condensation nucleus heats air as it rises toward clouds.

  • 2. Multiple Choice
    30 seconds
    1 pt

    The water droplets that form clouds are so tiny that they remain suspended in the atmosphere. As these droplets bump into each other, they can combine to form larger droplets. When these droplets get too heavy to stay airborne, they fall back to Earth as rain. Ice crystals behave the same way, but produce snow or sleet. The water falling back to Earth is called precipitation. Precipitation returns the evaporated water that formed the cloud back to Earth’s soil and bodies of water. This critical step in the water cycle would not happen without clouds.


    Which of the following best describes why precipitation falls to Earth?

    Water droplets or ice crystals heat up and become too warm to remain airborne.

    Water droplets or ice crystals combine and become too heavy to remain airborne.

    Water droplets or ice crystals are pushed out of clouds by wind in the atmosphere.

    Water droplets or ice crystals move around a cloud until they build up enough energy to escape.

  • 3. Multiple Choice
    30 seconds
    1 pt

    There are 10 different types of clouds. Clouds are categorized by their height in the atmosphere and their shape. There are high, middle and low clouds that fall into three shape categories: cirrus, stratus and cumulus. The terms cirrus, stratus and cumulus refer to both a category of clouds and a type of cloud. Other clouds get their name from a combination of shape category and words like nimbus and alto. Nimbus clouds are clouds that precipitate. Alto clouds are middle height clouds. Take cumulonimbus for example. This cloud name is a combination of cumulus and nimbus. From its name alone, we know it falls under the cumulus shape category and produces precipitation. Similarly, an altostratus cloud is a middle cloud that falls under the stratus shape category. Shape categories are also combined to name clouds, like stratocumulus, cirrostratus and cirrocumulus clouds.


    Which of the following clouds most likely produces precipitation?

    cirrus

    cirrostratus

    altocumulus

    nimbostratus

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