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Can clouds support an average person's mass to prevent them from falling? What do you think? Thanks!
Yes you can and it is done on a daily basis. You need to be able to catch hold of the cloud and hold it in place using a fabric envelope. It is called a hot air balloon.
Quote from: The Scientist on 31/12/2010 09:51:45Can clouds support an average person's mass to prevent them from falling? What do you think? Thanks!Interesting question - ONCE AGAIN by THE ScientistWhat sort of clouds are you referring to? (water droplets? Lead vapour? Uranium gas? Pressurised Chromium gas? An emulsion of methane and mercury droplets?)What about this cloud?
What makes clouds float?'Density' makes them float
The air cools and the water condenses out but the act of condensing releases a great deal of heat which also tends to reinforce the updraft. This is what creates the intense updraft in thunderheads.
Quote from: Soul Surfer on 02/01/2011 20:41:04The air cools and the water condenses out but the act of condensing releases a great deal of heat which also tends to reinforce the updraft. This is what creates the intense updraft in thunderheads.So the density of water vapor makes it float.
Apropos nothing, I think QC mentioned Gaia, or at least an equivalence, in an earlier thread discussing Earth. Now, that may seem as 'mumbo jumbo' but I found it quite fascinating. Take a look here The Gaia Hypothesis.
Density and buoyancy goes hand in hand. But it depends on how you look at it.So how do you look at it "Condensation or deposition of water above the Earth's surface creates clouds. In general, clouds develop in any air mass that becomes saturated (relative humidity becomes 100%). Saturation can occur by way of atmospheric mechanisms that cause the temperature of an air mass to be cooled to its dew point or frost point."There are several nice links in the post too. how air temperature, pressure, and density are related to cloud formation.
I agree with Foolosophy. I don't see how density can be the cause, as ice and water droplets are more dense than air. The cause is that these droplets are tiny enough that updrafts in the atmosphere can hold them aloft.