Yes and no. It's blue, but it does have clouds.
Neptune is blue due to the methane in its atmosphere, but there may be another component (yet unknown) that makes the color so intense compared with Uranus.
There are other patterns like the "scooter" and the Great Dark Spot. There are also clouds which are similar to Earth clouds. They are found in the lower part of the Neptune's atmosphere.
The clouds on Neptune are made of Methane, and appear to be Blue.
The presence of methane, ammonia, and water vapor in Neptune's atmosphere help create the belts of clouds. These compounds rise from the interior of Neptune due to convection currents caused by heat and pressure in the planet's interior, creating the distinctive cloud patterns seen in the atmosphere.
Evaporated water condenses in the atmosphere to form clouds.
Yes, but they are clouds that are not high up in the sky. They are low clouds!
Yes, Mercury does have a tenuous atmosphere that includes trace amounts of oxygen, sodium, hydrogen, helium, and potassium. The planet's atmosphere is so thin that it can't form clouds like those seen on Earth.
to see the storm hapening
Neptune's clouds are predominantly a deep blue color due to the presence of methane in its atmosphere. The methane absorbs red light, giving the planet its distinct blue hue.
The clouds on Neptune are made of Methane, and appear to be Blue.
hydrogen, methane, helium, ammonia
The presence of methane, ammonia, and water vapor in Neptune's atmosphere help create the belts of clouds. These compounds rise from the interior of Neptune due to convection currents caused by heat and pressure in the planet's interior, creating the distinctive cloud patterns seen in the atmosphere.
Yes. All clouds are in the atmosphere.
Condensation occurs as water vapor cools in the atmosphere, leading to the formation of clouds or fog.
No. The air is the atmosphere.
Hydrogen about 80% Helium about 18% Methane about 2%. The temperature varies at different levels. The blue colour is due to the methane and the white clouds seem to contain frozen methane. There are small traces of other things too.
a
The clouds that we normally see, such as rain clouds, are in the Earth's atmosphere and therefore are not in space. However, there do exist clouds in space, which have been observed by astronomers. They do not have the same chemical composition as clouds in our atmosphere.
Evaporated water condenses in the atmosphere to form clouds.