Proverbs about rain

1, long summer rain, nine floods.

2, the magpie branches call, and it will be fine when you go out.

3, it rains at dawn, and it doesn't rain on the top.

4. The sky is overcast and the rainstorm comes quickly.

5, an autumn rain and a cold, ten autumn rains put on cotton.

Extended data:

Causes of rain formation:

After the water on the earth is irradiated by sunlight, it becomes steam and is evaporated into the air.

Water vapor condenses into small water droplets when it meets cold air at high altitude. These water droplets are very small, with a diameter of only 0.000 1 ~ 0.0002 mm, and the largest is only 0.002 mm. They are small and light, and are held up in the air by the updraft in the air. It is these small water droplets that gather in the air to form clouds. These small water droplets will become raindrops and fall to the ground, and the volume will increase by about 1 10,000 times.

It mainly relies on two means:

One is the increase of condensation and sublimation.

The second is to rely on the collision and increase of cloud droplets.

In the initial stage of raindrop formation, cloud droplets mainly condense and condense themselves by constantly absorbing water vapor around the cloud.

If the water vapor in the cloud can be continuously supplied and replenished, so that the surface of cloud droplets is often in a state of supersaturation, then this condensation process will continue, making cloud droplets grow and become raindrops. However, sometimes the water vapor content in the cloud is limited, and in the same cloud, the water vapor is often in short supply, so it is impossible to make every cloud droplet grow into a larger raindrop, and some smaller cloud droplets have to be merged into a larger cloud droplet.

If there are water droplets and ice crystals in the cloud, the process of condensation and sublimation will be greatly accelerated.

When the cloud drops increase to a certain extent, due to the increasing volume and weight of large cloud drops, they can not only catch up with the slower small cloud drops, but also "swallow" more small cloud drops, making themselves stronger. When the big cloud drops get bigger and bigger until the air can no longer hold them, they fall straight from the clouds to the ground and become our common rain.