they contain much more gas than dust.
Nimbus clouds are the type of clouds that typically hold precipitation, such as rain or snow. These clouds are often thick and dark in appearance, indicating that they are heavily saturated with moisture and are likely to release precipitation.
Signs to look for: a lowering of the cloud base rotation in the clouds a hole in the clouds at the back of a thunderstorm Swirling dust beneath the lowered clouds
Clouds can appear yellow due to the scattering of sunlight by particles in the atmosphere, such as dust or pollution. This can give the clouds a yellow tint when viewed from certain angles or during sunrise or sunset.
Molecular clouds
Clouds form when water droplets condense around tiny particles called cloud condensation nuclei, which can be dust, pollution, or salt crystals in the atmosphere. These particles provide a surface for water vapor to gather and form droplets, eventually leading to the formation of clouds.
yes because there are alot of dust particals in it
Nebulae are made of clouds of hydrogen and other elements or clouds of dust (dark nebulae)
Dark dust clouds primarily absorb and scatter visible light, hence appearing dark to us. They do not radiate strongly in the ultraviolet part of the electromagnetic spectrum.
It's probably due to backlit dust clouds or grains that block starlight and so appear dark.
Dark dust clouds in space can absorb and scatter radiation from stars, blocking their light from reaching us. They can also absorb ultraviolet and visible light, heating up and re-emitting this energy as infrared radiation. This dust can also serve as the building blocks for new stars and planets.
Dust sticks to clouds, because of electricity.
The different types of nebulae include emission nebulae, reflection nebulae, and dark nebulae. Emission nebulae are clouds of gas and dust that emit light, reflection nebulae reflect light from nearby stars, and dark nebulae are dense clouds of dust that block the light from behind them.
clouds of dust and gas
they could be dust clouds.
Bright nebula are clouds of gas and dust that shine by reflected starlight. Dark nebula are clouds of dust and colder gas that can be seen by their silhouette against brighter objects behind them in the line of sight.
Dark nebulae are formed when dense interstellar clouds of gas and dust block the light from background stars, creating a visible dark patch against the bright emission nebulae behind them. Gravitational forces can cause these clouds to collapse and form new stars within them over time.
Nimbus clouds are the type of clouds that typically hold precipitation, such as rain or snow. These clouds are often thick and dark in appearance, indicating that they are heavily saturated with moisture and are likely to release precipitation.