Air and water droplets together create fog.
Water does have a gaseous phase, known as water vapor, and there is always a certain amount of that in the air. The varying amounts of water in the air are measured by the humidity level.
No, fog is a natural occurance. It is caused from water droplets suspended in the air due to different temperatures close to the Earth.
Condensation (i.e. water droplets) and dust.
Stratus clouds are mostly made of water droplets.
the water droplets indicate that the air is cooler on one side of the glass. If the droplets are inside, then the outside is cooler. If the droplets are outside, it means the inside is cooler.
evaporation
No, fog and a mixture of fine water droplets in the air are not examples of an emulsion. An emulsion is a mixture of two or more immiscible liquids where one is dispersed in the other, such as oil and water in mayonnaise. Fog is a suspension of water droplets in the air.
No, a cloud is not a compound. It is a collection of tiny water droplets or ice crystals suspended in the Earth's atmosphere.
'a visible aggregate of minute droplets of water or particles of ice or a mixture of both floating in the free air'
water droplets in the air form rain which is part of the water cycle
Fog is a mixture of water and air, which is itself a mixture..
What is the condensed water droplets in tha air
rain
All water droplets in the air is different just like when they fall down.
No. A cloud is a mixture of mostly water droplets.
No, fog is a natural occurance. It is caused from water droplets suspended in the air due to different temperatures close to the Earth.
No, clouds are not compounds. Clouds are a collection of tiny water droplets or ice crystals suspended in the atmosphere. These particles come together to form clouds due to changes in temperature, humidity, and air pressure.
No. Water vapor can't be seen or felt. "Droplets" suspended in the air are still liquid water.