Cloud condensation nuclei or
CCNs (also known as
cloud seeds) are small particles typically 0.2
µm, or 1/100th the size of a
cloud droplet on which water vapour condenses. Water requires a non-gaseous surface to make the transition from a
vapour to a
liquid; this process is called condensation. In the atmosphere, this surface presents itself as tiny solid or liquid particles called CCNs. When no CCNs are present,
water vapour can be supercooled at about -13°C (8°F) for 5-6 hours before droplets spontaneously form (this is the basis of the
cloud chamber for detecting subatomic particles). In above freezing temperatures the air would have to be
supersaturated to around 400 efore the droplets could form. (Reference?)