Both fog and mist form from water condensation due to temperature drop. Fog appears near ground level, mist forms when warm air meets cold air. Fog has 5-6 types, mist has no specific types. Fog is most common in winter morning, mist in mountains and forests
Precipitation is water falling to Earth's surface due to gravity. Forms through evaporation and condensation in warm air. Temperature, clouds, and winds determine precipitation type
Mist is a thin fog formed by condensation near earth's surface. Horizontal visibility of 1-2 kilometers. Can be a fine spray of liquid or suspension of liquid in gas
Fog is a cloud that touches the ground, reducing visibility to one kilometer. Fog forms when water vapor condenses around microscopic particles. Fog is denser than mist, containing more water molecules per unit space
Sunny/clear weather occurs above 85,340 meters altitude. Sunny days are brought by anticyclones and cause temperature variations. Clear skies at night significantly lower temperatures
Rain consists of water droplets larger than 0.5mm. Drizzle is fine, closely spaced droplets that float. Ice pellets are frozen raindrops or melted snowflakes. Hail forms from ice balls larger than 5mm. Snow consists of branched crystals forming six-pointed stars