because it is the water vapour is evaporating
When a shuttle takes off, clouds of steam are produced due to the rapid condensation of water vapor in the surrounding air caused by the intense heat generated by the rocket engines. As the hot exhaust gases come into contact with the cooler air, water vapor in the air condenses into droplets, forming the visible clouds of steam.
Clouds of steam are produced during a space launch because the immense heat generated by the rocket engines causes moisture in the air around the rocket to quickly evaporate and form visible water vapor. This rapid expansion of the heated air creates the cloud-like formations seen during launch.
The fuel used by the main space shuttle engines is super-cold liquid hydrogen, kept at a temperature of -253oC. The hydrogen fuel is combusted with liquid oxygen in a reaction that reaches temperatures of up to 3136oC to creates a high-speed stream of gas which ultimately generates the thrust necessary for launching the shuttle. This gas stream is essentially just very hot water steam with no CO2.
The white smoke seen during a shuttle launch is caused by the ignition of the solid rocket boosters. It consists of exhaust gases and steam produced by the burning of solid propellant.
Before the main 1883 eruption, Krakatoa produced, frequent earthquakes, steam clouds, and sometimes small eruptions.
You cannot walk on clouds because they are not solid. Clouds are masses of water vapor, also known as steam.
Steam is produced to turn the turbines then it is released through the cooling towers. It is water vapor and if it is cool outside then it forms into clouds because it condenses in the air. During the summertime and when it is dry it is hard to see the water vapor.
Steam.
air + steam
Steam is produced when moisture from the food is hot and it releases itself by *steaming* out
steam clouds water vapor
The white clouds seen when boiling water are caused by tiny water droplets that condense and become visible as steam. The steam appears white because it scatters light, similar to a cloud in the sky.