Yes you can because hot air from your mouth combined with the cold air molecules creates a visual aid so you can see your breath.
Because your breath is warm, the air is cold, they meet, and the become a gas that you can see.
okay so your breath is hot and the air is cold so they mix... there is also moisture in your breath so the moisture in your breath might be condensing right in front of you!
It is because the warm air in your lungs condenses immediately when it is breathed out and comes into contact with the cold air. What you are physically seeing are very small droplets of water.
When it gets cold out side and someone breathes and sees their breath they are viewing oxygen. They see it do to the particles of moisture in the air and the cold verses hot air.
condensation. you have cold air entering a very warm place (lungs) then back out to the colder environment when you breath out. same pricipal as when your windows fog up. The actual water molecule comes from the air.
Because your breath is warm, the air is cold, they meet, and the become a gas that you can see.
I see my breath, it's just that cold It's so cold i see it hold in the air... ?? i ain't such a gr8 poet :)
The warm water vapour in your breath condenses into water droplets when it hits the cold air.
Your breath is substantially colder than the outside air... when your warm breath suddenly is immersed in that cold air, it forms condensation.
When the air is cold outside, you can see your breath as a smokey wisp in front of you. This is because your breath is warmer than the surrounding air.
okay so your breath is hot and the air is cold so they mix... there is also moisture in your breath so the moisture in your breath might be condensing right in front of you!
here is a way to find out... breath in, then breath out... do you see anything?... no, the stuff you breath out is carbon dioxide.So the answer is yes... but when you can see your breath sometimes (usually in winter), that is because your breath is warm and the air is cold. Not because the cold makes carbon dioxide visible.
The air that you exhale contains water vapour. When you exhale during a cold day, the relative humidity increases. Relative humidity is actually the percentage of the amount of water vapour in the air. (the maximum amount of water vapour that the air can hold at that temperature) The colder the air, the less water vapour it can carry. When exhaled, air mixes with cold air, the temperature of the exhaled air drops, but there is more water vapour. When the air becomes saturated, (relative humidity is 100%), the extra water vapour will condense, allowing you to see your breathe on cold days.
Because when you breath warm air comes from inside you so the heat will show on the cold. Also called condensation
Condensation. It is the same process that causes moisture on the outside of a cold drink. Since your breath is warmer than the outside air, some of the moisture in your breath condenses in the cold air and forms molecules of liquid water and ice.
By Breathing.
When you breath out the water in your breath condenses (freezes) allowing you to see the ice particles