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Cloud-chasing [note 1] is the activity of blowing large clouds of vapor using an electronic cigarette. [8] Using the devices for "cloud-chasing" began in the West Coast of the US . [ 8 ] The exact origins of the activity are unclear, [ 9 ] but most competitive e-cigarette users say that it started around 2012. [ 10 ]
E-cigarette user blowing a cloud of aerosol (vapor). The activity is known as cloud-chasing. [296] Large gatherings of vapers, called vape meets, take place around the US. [286] They focus on e-cigarette devices, accessories, and the lifestyle that accompanies them. [286] Vapefest, which started in 2010, is an annual show hosted by different ...
Flavoring are often added to e-liquids as well as dry smoke blends. There are currently over 7,700 e-liquid flavors available, most have not been laboratory tested for toxicity. [88] There are numerous flavors (e.g., fruit, vanilla, caramel, coffee [5]) of e-liquid available. [7] There are also flavorings that resemble the taste of cigarettes. [7]
An explanation from the National Weather Service on atmospheric rivers. An atmospheric river (AR) is a narrow corridor or filament of concentrated moisture in the atmosphere.
Sea of fog riding the coastal marine layer through the Golden Gate Bridge at San Francisco, California Afternoon smog within a coastal marine layer in West Los Angeles. A marine layer is an air mass that develops over the surface of a large body of water, such as an ocean or large lake, in the presence of a temperature inversion.
Clouds form when invisible water vapor condenses into microscopic water droplets or into microscopic ice crystals. This may happen when air with a high proportion of gaseous water cools. A distrail forms when the heat of engine exhaust evaporates the liquid water droplets in a cloud, turning them back into invisible, gaseous water vapor.
Connection between sea foam and sea spray formation. The dark orange line indicates processes common to the formation of both sea spray and sea foam. When wind, whitecaps, and breaking waves mix air into the sea surface, the air regroups to form bubbles, floats to the surface, and bursts at the air-sea interface. [10]
This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 4 March 2025. Visible mass of liquid droplets or frozen crystals suspended in the atmosphere "Nephology" redirects here; not to be confused with Nephrology. For other uses, see Cloud (disambiguation). Cloudscape over Borneo, taken by the International Space Station Part of a series on Weather Temperate ...