About 432,000 results
Open links in new tab
  1. Fill a jar with 2 inches (5 cm) of warm water and stir. The warm water will form water vapor through a process called evaporation. Evaporation is the process of liquid changing into gas. The water vapor will begin to rise inside the jar. You will not be able to see the water vapor. It is an invisible gas.
    www.jpl.nasa.gov/edu/learn/project/make-a-cloud-in-a-bottle/
    www.jpl.nasa.gov/edu/learn/project/make-a-cloud-in-a-bottle/
    Was this helpful?
  2. How to Make a Cloud in a Bottle - Science Demonstration

  3. Evaporation Station . PLUM LANDING - PBS KIDS

  4. Making Clouds: How to Make a Water Cycle Model

    Sep 1, 2010 · Kids will love making clouds and learning how to make a water cycle model in this fun science fair project idea that explores evaporation and precipitation.

  5. Make Rain Clouds in a Bottle - National Geographic Kids

    You’re mimicking the part of Earth’s water cycle in which evaporated water (water vapor) cools and condenses, forming clouds as they connect with dust. In this experiment, the alcohol...

  6. Cloud in a Bottle - Museum of Science and Industry

    This experiment creates a model of a cloud system in a bottle. Clouds form every day around the world. How and when clouds form depends on a few factors including temperature, pressure, water vapor and dust.

  7. Water cycle in a jar - Experiment Archive

    In the jar, the hot water evaporates and becomes water vapor. When the water vapor is cooled by the ice, it transforms to small water droplets that are visible as a cloud. The water vapor condenses more easily on the small particles that …

  8. How to Make a Cloud in a Bottle – 3 Easy Methods

    Dec 2, 2021 · Pour about a teaspoon of rubbing alcohol into a 1-liter plastic bottle. Seal the bottle and swirl around the liquid. Squeeze the bottle a few times. When you squeeze the bottle, a cloud forms. When you release pressure, it …

  9. Condensation Experiment - A Cloud in a Bottle - The Water Project

  10. Water Cycle Demonstration - VanCleave's Science Fun

    Water evaporates from the surface of the warm water forming water vapor. This water vapor then condenses when it hits the top surface of the bottle or the air beneath, both of which have been cooled by the ice cube.