capacity and specific humidity are the same
Condensation of water vapor occurs when the temperature of the gas cools to its saturation limit. The gas is then compressed and begins to collect on the cooling surface.
No, dew is liquid water and it forms when the air temperature drops sufficiently that the air can no longer hold all its water vapour. This must be above freezing point. Of course the same argument applies when the temperature does drop below zero, but then we get ice crystals instead of water drops, and we call it frost.
Could be your anti freeze is low or more likely your thermostat is stuck open and your engine is not getting up to operating temperature.
in a word yes when you turn the engine off theoil pressure drops quickly but the water pressure drops slowly so water will get into the sump then your crankshaft journals fail
700,000,000,000,000,000 drops by:smart guy
Engine makes noise, performance drops, fuel mileage drops,
It stays at 100%.
Wherever in evaporating stream a temperature drops lower, corresponding to lower vapor pressure than the partial pressure of the vapor in the stream, condensation occurs.
Condensation occurs when warm air hits a cooler surface and the moisture from the warm air forms on the cooler surface. In meteorology, condensation is water that is collected as droplets onto a cloud surface when humid or warm air gets in to contact with it.
When air is cooled to its dew point, it reaches a temperature at which its water vapor condenses into liquid water. This forms tiny water droplets which ultimately become visible as fog, mist, or dew on surfaces. Dew point is the temperature at which the air becomes saturated with water vapor and cannot hold any more, leading to the condensation of excess vapor.
Condensation commonly occurs when a vapor is cooled to its dew point, but the dew point can also be reached through compression. In nature dew point occurs with a drop in atmospheric pressure and temperature
Water drops that fall when the temperature is below freezing, fall as SNOW . Water drops that fall when the temperature is above freezing fall as RAIN .
The dew point refers to water droplets forming on the grass as the temperature drops. This is actually a condensation process.
it condenses
It's called "condensation"...The glass gets colder than the dewpoint temperature of the air (temperature at which saturation occurs and water vapor turns into liquid water) and therefore water drops form on the cold glass.
Film condensation occurs when a continuous film of condensed liquid forms on a surface, while dropwise condensation occurs when individual droplets of condensed liquid form and coalesce on a surface. Dropwise condensation is more efficient than film condensation in terms of heat transfer, but it is more difficult to achieve and maintain in practice.
Nope. If you turn the heat off so the temperature drops below 100C, you will have non-boiling water. When the steam's temperature drops below the vaporization temperature it will return to liquid state.
Every element has a temperature where it changes or starts to change from a solid or liquid to a gas. Carbon sublimates from the solid form. Condensation works in the reverse manner.