be cues it tiny water droplets
When you see a cloud, you are seeing water droplets, not water vapor. Clouds form when water vapor in the atmosphere cools and condenses into tiny liquid water droplets or ice crystals. These droplets cluster together, making the cloud visible. So, while the cloud originates from water vapor, what you see is actually the condensed water droplets.
See the related link below for water polo pictures
In or after a rainstorm. You might see one using the hose. You see it when there is water and sun. The light gets reflected of the droplets into its true colors. The water droplet acts like a prism.
Clouds are made of tiny water droplets or ice crystals that have condensed from water vapor in the air. The water droplets or ice crystals gather together to form visible clouds that we see in the sky.
Water vapour is not a gas. We can not see gas. Once we see the water vapour as droplets in the air then it is small liquid droplets of water. The steam that we see above the kettle is again condensed droplets of water that have lost the energy to maintain their gaseous existence. Close to the spout of the kettle we cannot see steam because that is where there is the gas molecules of water. If you can see it then it is a liquid. Humidity in the air is a gas.
Yes, tiny water droplets forming at the spout of a kettle is typically due to condensation. When the hot water vapor comes into contact with the cooler spout, it cools down and condenses into the water droplets that you see.
Mostly they would be water droplets which may be because of rainfall, morning dew (condensation) or irrigation.
Rainbows are created by water droplets in the air acting as prisms. If it's dry, there are no water droplets in the air, and no rainbows.
One place to find pictures of the bodies of water in the Philippines would be in an atlas. An atlas can be found in the reference section of the library.
Yes. If they were only water vapor, you wouldn't be able to see them.
The warm water vapour in your breath condenses into water droplets when it hits the cold air.