Water
Clouds are not solid; they are made up of water droplets and ice crystals.
The water in clouds is in the form of liquid droplets. Clouds are made up of tiny water droplets that have condensed from water vapor in the air. If the temperature drops low enough, these liquid water droplets can freeze and turn into ice crystals.
Clouds are made of vapor, but when the vapor gets too dense, droplets form, fall, and become rain.
Clouds are not made of cotton. Clouds are made up of tiny water droplets or ice crystals that have condensed in the atmosphere.
Clouds are made up of tiny water droplets or ice crystals that have condensed around particles in the air, such as dust or pollution. These droplets or crystals gather together to form visible clouds that we see in the sky.
No, stratus clouds are primarily composed of water droplets. These clouds are low-lying, layered clouds that form in stable atmospheric conditions. However, high-altitude stratus clouds may contain ice crystals if temperatures are cold enough.
No, thunderstorm clouds are not made up of tiny droplets of carbon dioxide. Thunderstorm clouds are composed of water vapor that has condensed into water droplets or ice crystals. Carbon dioxide is a colorless gas and is not typically found in clouds in the form of droplets.
Cold-air clouds, such as cumulus and stratocumulus clouds, are made up of tiny water droplets or ice crystals suspended in the air. These clouds typically form at low altitudes and are associated with stable atmospheric conditions. The cloud droplets or ice crystals in cold-air clouds are much smaller compared to those in rain clouds, which is why they often appear bright white.
Clouds are gaseous. They are made of billions of tiny water droplets suspended in the air.
Clouds are not made of gases, but of tiny water droplets or ice crystals that have condensed around particles such as dust or pollutants in the atmosphere. While gases such as water vapor are present in clouds, it is the condensed water droplets or ice crystals that give clouds their visible form.
Liquid and solid. Clouds are formed from tiny droplets of water or ice. Low fluffy clouds are liquid, the high streak clouds are usually solid ice particles. You can see the droplets often when you walk through fog, which is the same as a cloud, but at ground level.
Clouds are made up of water droplets or ice crystals, not gases. When warm air rises and cools, the water vapor it contains condenses to form tiny liquid droplets or ice crystals, which then gather to form clouds.