Water vapor
Water vapor
Gaseous
Water in the atmosphere exists in a gaseous state, known as water vapor. Depending on temperature and pressure, water vapor can condense to form liquid droplets (clouds) or solid ice crystals (snowflakes, hail) in the atmosphere.
The gaseous part of the Earth is called the atmosphere. The solid portion of Earth is the geosphere, and the hydrosphere is the Earth's water component.
Water is stored in the atmosphere in the form of water vapor, which is the gaseous state of water. It can be found in the air as clouds, fog, or mist, and plays a crucial role in various atmospheric processes such as cloud formation and precipitation.
Steam.
Gaseous cycles refer to the processes in which elements such as oxygen, nitrogen, carbon, and sulfur circulate through the atmosphere. These cycles involve the exchange of these elements between living organisms, the atmosphere, and the Earth's surface. Examples of gaseous cycles include the carbon cycle and the nitrogen cycle.
Water transpired by plants is passed into the atmosphere as water vapor - gaseous water.
The term for water vapor is "gas." Water vapor is the gaseous state of water when it evaporates from liquid water.
There is no gaseous atmosphere to speak of, and no liquid water, so no rain.
The gaseous state of water, i.e., water vapor condense in atmosphere to form clouds. The amount of water vapor in air is known as humidity. It describes the weather.
Water that is in a gaseous state is called water vapouror steam.