Indoor Rain Clouds

Making indoor rain clouds demonstrates the idea of temperature, the measure of how hot or cold something is. Here’s how to do it:


Take two clear glasses that fit snugly together when stacked. (Cylindrical glasses with straight sides work well.)


Fill one glass half-full with ice water and the other half-full with very hot water (definitely an adult job – and take care not to shatter the glass with the hot water!). Be sure to leave enough air space for the clouds to form in the hot glass.


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Comments

21 Responses to “Making Clouds”

  1. This experiment only uses water, not rubbing alcohol.

  2. apriljtaranto says:

    Do you need to add the rubbing alcohol to the bottle if you are putting the bottle in the freezer overnight?

  3. Andrea Albury says:

    is it okay if i have a different size bottle?

  4. Try it! Color the water first so you can see what happens, since they are both clear.

  5. Melanie Church says:

    What if you mixed alcohol and water together in the bottle?

  6. Not really, but if you really want to, do it with adult supervision, and do NOT cap the bottle. Always leave it open so it can vent, other wise it explodes and may cause serious injury.

  7. Michelle Stevens says:

    Could I use dry ice instead of regular ice in the 1st experiment?

  8. Get a broom? 🙂

    Only kidding. If you’re cautious about using glass, then try clear plastic containers.

  9. Michelle Stevens says:

    What should I do if the glass shatters?

  10. Yes heat is the transfer of thermal energy. Heat is really hard to define. Some teachers use the definition that head is energy in transit, to help students understand that heat is not the internal energy of an object. I’ll review the wording in my documents to see if I can clarify that up a bit. 🙂

  11. Hi Aurora! Thank you and your team for putting together such an awesome and engaging program! We are learning so much as a family! It’s been awesome!

    Question: In the Thermodynamics reading (pgs 8-9),you say that heat is “the movement of thermal energy from one object to another.” You say that nothing can really “have heat.” However, under Highlights (p.8-9), you say “heat can be transferred from one object to another through conduction, convection, and radiation.” Should I actually teach that “thermal energy” is the thing being transferred through these processes? Also when you say, “When an object absorbs heat, it does not necessarily change temperature,” should I actually use the term “thermal energy” rather than “heat”? OR is heat an entity that really can be absorbed, released, transferred, etc? I am thinking that perhaps heat is just the speed of the molecules that can impact other molecules??? In sum, if you can shed light on whether I should use the term “thermal energy” or “heat” when teaching ideas like conduction, convection, radiation, heat capacity, and specific heat, I would be grateful! 🙂

  12. Anonymous says:

    We had so much fun making “indoor rain.”

  13. You’ll want to make sure you are logged in first. If you still have trouble, our team can help out quickly!

  14. Keri Hansen says:

    This is the first experiment page I am checking out with my 30 day trial. I can only see the Indoor Rain Clouds, and it stops at “Be sure to leave enough air space for the clouds to form in the hot glass.” But it doesn’t say before that which way to stack the glasses (although I assume the hot goes on the bottom since the cloud forms in that one?). Am I seeing the full experiment or am I missing something?

  15. Lisa Nehring says:

    We used quart and pint canning jars. Worked beautifully! Kids loved it and did it several times ; )! Fun, fun!

  16. Kathy Balman says:

    Bottling clouds using the smoke didnt work too well for us…I think its because I used a 16 oz bottle? But when I took the cap off puffs of smoke (ie clouds) came out and made the kids very happy so in a way it was a success.

  17. Kathy Balman says:

    Fun experiment we just did #1 the kids had a blast.

  18. Lydia Fancher says:

    I found out that when the cold water drops into the hot water the cold water kinda acts like food dye but doesn’t change the color if you try it just to let you know I use filtered water maybe it only affects filtered water!

    I use filtered water for cold and hot I did tap water

  19. It looks like a thin fog layer in the top of the lower glass, like a wispy haze.

  20. BJ Lackey says:

    On the first experiment….

    Can you show us what a cloud looks like?