no , condensed water
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Clouds are primarily made up of water droplets or ice crystals, not gas and dust. Water vapor in the atmosphere condenses into tiny water droplets or ice crystals, which then come together to form clouds. Dust and other particles can also contribute to cloud formation by serving as nuclei around which water vapor can condense.
Clouds of gas and dust in which stars form are called nebulae. These regions of space are where the raw materials for star formation gather and eventually collapse under their own gravity to give birth to new stars.
No, all-stars are not formed by nebulas. All-stars are formed from clouds of gas and dust called molecular clouds, which collapse under their own gravity to form a star. Nebulas are massive clouds of dust and gas in space, where stars are born.
Stars. That is how stars are formed. They form from nebulae.
Stars begin their lives as clouds of gas and dust called nebulae. Within these nebulae, gravity causes the gas and dust to collapse and heat up, eventually leading to the ignition of nuclear fusion in the core, which marks the birth of a star.
These are generically referred to as, not surprisingly; 'interstellar clouds'