Create a Portable Cloud

Students profile/age of the student:6 -12 years old…
Connected subject in the curriculumScience,
Skills and competencies to be developedcritical thinking, content knowledge, teamwork, listening skills, decision making…
Terminology, keywordscloud formation, moisture, pressure, temperature
Teaching techniques and tools:storytelling, content knowledge, demonstration
Materials needed:For each group of 4:
• A glass or plastic gallon jar with a wide mouth
• Cold water (100 ml)
• Hot water (100 ml)
• Rubber glove
• Matches
• Large rubber band
• Paper and pencil to record observations
Materials offeredAdditional links:
https://scied.ucar.edu/sites/default/
files/files/activity_files/activity_cloudbottle2_0_0.pdf

The time needed for the activityapprox 20 minutes

Description

symmetrical photography of clouds covered blue sky
Photo by James Wheeler on Pexels.com

Brainstorm: what is needed for clouds to form? Students will likely mention that clouds are made of water. In this activity they will make water into a cloud.


Exploring air pressure: Have students add the cold water to the jar and stretch the open end of a rubber glove over the mouth of the jar with the glove fingers hanging down into the jar. Affix a rubber band to secure the glove. Have one student hold the seal on of the jar while another tries to pull the glove outward. Ask the students to pull gloves to describe how it feels. Discuss that this decreases the air pressure. Air molecules have to move farther apart to fill in space. Instruct all students to tore the cord that they observe inside the jar as the glove is pulled up and then pushed down. Is there a visible change when air pressure is changed? (There won’t be, but this will help students understand the impact of condensation nuclei in part 2 below.)


Exploring condensation nuclei: Tell students that particles in the atmosphere help clouds form. Instruct students to remove the glove as they drop a lit match into the jar, then quickly seal the jar with the glove as before (containing the smoke within the jar). Instruct students to record what they observe inside the jar as a student pulls the glove up and then pushes it down into the jar. Did the particles aid cloud formation? (Students should notice fog forming in their jar.)
Exploring water vapor: Discuss the process of evaporation. Have groups repeat the procedure using hot water, which will evaporate more readily than cold water. Instruct students to record what they observe inside the jar as a student pulls the glove up. Did more evaporation aid cloud formation?
Discuss what helped the cloud to form and how this model is, and is not, like the real world.

Create a Portable Cloud