Clouds are primarily made up of tiny water droplets or ice crystals. These particles form when water vapor in the air condenses around tiny particles called cloud condensation nuclei. It's a mixture of liquid and gas.
Type your answer here... clouds are made of liquid(water vapour).
False. Steam fog or clouds are made of water vapor in the gas state condensed into tiny droplets, not in the liquid state.
Clouds are not a gas. They are made up of very small water droplets. That is why the air is so damp when you are in fog. Clouds are moved along by wind, which is caused by a process of air cooling and heating. See the Web Link 'Meteorology' to the left for an explanation.
Liquids and gases have no fixed shape and no structural strength; they cannot support anything by themselves. Gas, however, does have some applicability in transportation, since it can be used to inflate balloons or zeppelins with which you can travel by air. But this only works because of the balloon envelope, which is made of a solid material that contains the gas.
Molecules of gas have higher average kinetic energy compared to molecules in liquids, which allows them to move at faster speeds. Additionally, gases have greater spacing between molecules and weaker intermolecular forces, leading to more frequent collisions and higher velocities in gases compared to liquids.
Type your answer here... clouds are made of liquid(water vapour).
made of oil.
because of the clouds have feelings too don't they now.
it is made up of gas and liquids.
They are gas clouds
Well to rain on us of course clouds are even made of rain in a gas form
Clouds are water vapor, made from Hydrogen and Oxygen -- H2O.
it is made up of gas and liquids.
Because it is made mostly out of gas and the clouds around it are gas too :)
yes
Clouds are gaseous. They are made of billions of tiny water droplets suspended in the air.
Clouds are mostly made up of water vapor, which is indeed a gas. Air itself isn't a gas, but it is made up of many different gases, such as nitrogen, oxygen, argon, carbon dioxide, and many others.