You are seeing it in its liquid state (as small drops of liquid). The vapour phase is totally invisible/transparent.
Steam fog and clouds are mostly composed of water vapor in the gas state. Clouds are formed when warm air rises and condenses into water droplets or ice crystals. Steam fog occurs when water evaporates from a warm water body and condenses into a fog above the cooler air. So, while there may be some tiny liquid water droplets present in clouds or steam fog, the majority of the observed phenomenon is in the gas state.
The white clouds seen above boiling water are indeed steam. This is caused by the water vapor rising from the boiling water and condensing in the cooler air above to form visible droplets of water vapor.
Clouds and steam are forms of evaporated water. Water is the main base for evaporation to occur. Bot clouds and steam can condense in a cool temperature, while water can bothe condense and evaporate. So they are not much alike.
Water in it's gaseous form is referred to as steam. steam
All clouds are made of water vapor.
true
False. Steam fog or clouds are made of water vapor in the gas state condensed into tiny droplets, not in the liquid state.
it is gas
When you see steam fog or clouds, you are seeing water in its gaseous state, known as water vapor. This occurs when water evaporates from a liquid form and condenses in the atmosphere to form visible clouds or fog.
Steam fog and clouds are mostly composed of water vapor in the gas state. Clouds are formed when warm air rises and condenses into water droplets or ice crystals. Steam fog occurs when water evaporates from a warm water body and condenses into a fog above the cooler air. So, while there may be some tiny liquid water droplets present in clouds or steam fog, the majority of the observed phenomenon is in the gas state.
true
The white clouds seen above boiling water are indeed steam. This is caused by the water vapor rising from the boiling water and condensing in the cooler air above to form visible droplets of water vapor.
Steam, clouds, and fog are all examples of water in a gaseous state.
true
Water vapour, steam, or clouds; depending on the context used.
Im pretty sure its called evaporation, it evaporates into the air and gets carried up by clouds and the clouds carry it for miles and miles. clouds are mostly made of water. If it is cold enough it will turn into hail or snow and the steam is just hummitidy, moisture, or mist in the air.
Boiling water: When water is heated, it changes from a liquid state to a gaseous state, forming steam. Evaporation of alcohol: When rubbing alcohol is exposed to air, it evaporates and changes into a gas.