1. The sun set alight the water drops that speckled their leaves and shadowed the ground beneath them. 2. The pageant, covered with sunlit water drops, looked like a glittering vision floating on cloud. 3. When the water drops, the substances drift back along the passageways and soak into the water table. 4. Fogs that form near bodies of water are typically thicker, because of the large availability of moisture for the myriad of tiny water drops that compose warm fogs. 5. Fog forms when air near the ground is cooled enough for the water vapor in the atmosphere to condense into visible water drops. 6. Should the water drop below the safety level, the burner will automatically shut down. 7. So, when water drops are sparse, freezing is fast because little heat is released. 8. Susan Derges photographed jets of water using stroboscopic lights and sound waves, producing images that look like necklaces of water drops. 9. Without them, water drops tend to cling to glass and metal, leaving spots as the dishes dry. |