The difference between fog and sea of clouds
1. Definition: Fog is a weather phenomenon in which water droplets and ice crystals are condensed by water vapor and suspended in the air. The sea of clouds is a continuous air mass with humidity of 1%. It is essentially a large-scale cloud, which is composed of countless small water droplets and ice crystals and suspended in the atmosphere.
2. Formation conditions: Fog needs high humidity and low temperature, and appears in the morning and at night. The formation of a sea of clouds requires sufficient water vapor, steady wind and low enough inversion layer, which appears in mountainous areas with higher altitude.
3. Appearance: The fog is white and gray, which is thin and can form fog on the ground. The sea of clouds is white and gray, which is thick and can form large-scale clouds in the sky.