Yeah, and what’s going on with clouds?
Don’t they start raining once they become saturated? But at what point do they actually become saturated?
Can a little baby cloud become saturated, or is that reserved for really big clouds?
Is it possible to squish a medium cloud into a little baby cloud, or would that make it saturated, and force it to start raining?
Can you weigh a cloud? I mean, they’re full of water the whole time they’re up there; they just aren’t yet “saturated” or else they’d be raining, so they should have some weight to them, right?
Considering they must have some weight to them, even if not a tremendous amount, why are they floating?
What’s up with that?
Just because something is “light” doesn’t mean it’s not affected by gravity.
I’m smaller than a 747, yet that massive aircraft can float in midair, and I cannot. By that (indisputable) logic, clouds should sink.
Also, it’s always sunny above the clouds during the daytime, so why don’t clouds themselves evaporate and scatter throughout the atmosphere rather than forming a giant floating water ball.
Are clouds basically sky-lakes?
What would happen if a shark was swimming around a cloud and wanted to “breach” the surface to bite a bird? Could it jump out of the top of the cloud, catch a common gull in its jaws, and land back in the cloud?
What would happen if you put a fish in a cloud? Would it be happy? Could it breathe? I wonder if it could swim around, but once it reaches the surface, it could accidentally fall out and plummet 20,000 feet.
That’d be crazy.
Until next time,
Michael J. Erickson, CEO & Co-Founder