condensation
a great amount of water vaptor change phase to become liquid water droplets in the clouds that form a thunderstorm. does this phase change release or absord energy? how do you know
clouds are large quantities of liquid water droplets
Original answer is INCORRECT. Clouds forming in the sky is a physical change because a chemical change requires a change in the chemical composition of a material and the H2O, no matter a solid liquid or gas, is always H20.
Tiny droplets of liquid water
Clouds are visible form of moisture. They can be liquid droplets or frozen droplets of water or any other chemical suspended in the atmosphere.
The change process is evoporation and an example is water to water vapor
Ans: water vapour forming clouds: water that had previously evaporated (turned from liquid to gas) from the seas and ground reaches an altitude where that gaseous water cools to such a point that it precipitates to water droplets.
No, they are large quantities of liquid water droplets.
Clouds form when water vapor condenses into tiny liquid droplets. If enough condensation occurs in a cloud then some of the droplets will grow bigger and fall as rain.
Mostly, but clouds also contain dust particles and bits and pieces of ice, depending on how high they are. It is widely accepted that clouds are made of water droplets and water vapor
No. Water vapor can't be seen or felt. "Droplets" suspended in the air are still liquid water.
It's called liquifying, or condensing. Water vapor in the atmosphere condenses into tiny droplets of water which scatter light, and collections of these are called clouds.