with less water in it
If you take hot water and put it in a bottle some of the water will vaporize into the air and then due to the colder environment around the bottle condense against the bottle walls leaving the "fog" effect on the edges. What your actually seeing is tiny water droplets on the side of the bottle.
alcohol is basicall condensation it causes fog just like hot and or cold water
Warm water has more fog due to great humidity
Make fog in a bottle with hot waterIn this case the condensation is caused by the temperature variation between simple ice and hot water. 1. Fill up the jar or bottle completely with very hot water and let it stay there for about 60 seconds. 2. Pour out all but about an inch of the hot water. 3. Put a strainer or bag over the top of the jar. 4. Place ice cubes in the strainer or plastic bag. 5. Fog will form as the hot water vapor from the bottom of the bottle contacts the cold air created by the ice cubes and begins condensation.and there ya go. hehe
Fog is water suspended in the air. The more water that is nearby, the higher the chance of fog.
Polluted air has more particulate matter, such as soot and dust, that can act as condensation nuclei for water droplets to form fog. These particles provide a surface for water vapor to condense on, leading to fog formation. Clean air typically lacks these particles, making it less likely to form fog.
Your water bottle fogs up due to condensation, which occurs when warm, humid air comes into contact with the cold surface of the bottle. The temperature difference causes the moisture in the air to cool and condense into tiny water droplets on the exterior. This is more common when the contents of the bottle are significantly colder than the surrounding air. Additionally, factors like humidity and temperature can influence the amount of fogging you see.
In a bath there is less hot water vapour condensing into particles for you to see. Steam is made up of water vapour that you can't see. More fog is produced from a shower because cold air surrounding the hot water from the shower causes water vapour to change into small water droplets called fog not steam.
There are no fog-proof lenses available. I assume plastic lenses might be slightly less likely due to fog compared to glass, considering that plastic is much less thermally conductive. However, I have heard that plastic lenses still fog up. The colder the water is, the more likely it is that water will condense on the inside of the lens. The best way to prevent fogging is to apply spit or a commercially available anti-fog agent to the inside of the mask lens and rinsing just prior to diving. I dive in cold water (50f) all the time and don't have problems with fogging when I use anti-fog.
It does not have water in it like fog does. Hope it helps- Roxas riku
mostly the same as input, but less oxygen and more mucus
Fog can be present any time of day. However, fog is more abundant in the mornings because the temperature is cooler and there tends to be less sunlight to burn the fog away. And there tends to be less fog in the afternoons than in the mornings because temperatures are warmer and there is more sunlight.