No, when water boils it evaporates into single water molecules. We can see the cooler of these as they condense into steam. Steam or water vapour is the water molecules re-condensing into water droplets.
yes. cool the air and the water will condense.
ammonia dissociate in air , if bromide available.products of dissociation is nitrogen and water. Ammonia can dissociate by UV in air. Ozone can turn bromide ion to bromate ion, and bromate ion can turn ammonia to nitrogen gas and water. The cheapest method of treating ammonia in water, is to pass the water stream through a wetlands, and let (micro)biology use it for a foodsource.
Do you mean at what temperature does air turn into a liquid or at what temperature does water condense out of the air?If the latter then air itself has not water in it and thus can never turn into water. It's the moisture (water vapor) in the air that will condense out of the air and turn into a liquid. This begins to occur at the dew point which depends on the how much moisture there is in the first place (humidity), the pressure, and the temperature. For example, current conditions where I am: Temp = 74 F, Pressure = 29.97 inches, Relative Humidity = 44%, dew point = 51 F. So this means that if we keep the pressure constant and drop the temperature to 51 F, water will begin to condense out of the air.If the former then, that's harder (for me anyway to answer). Usually the air is compressed AND cooled. At atmospheric pressure, the temperature would need to be extremely low for liquification. Nitrogen has a boiling temp of -195.8 C (the other gases boil at higher temps) so you would need to get the temperature below that.
Hydrogen doesn't turn water milky.
No ice can turn to water and water can turn to ice
air in the water lines causes banging and whistles/screams. Turn off main water, turn on the faucet, turn main water back on, and it should force the air out.
Water turn into a gas called water vapour. The air depending on its temperature will hold a certain amount of this. when the air comes into contact with water if the humidity of the air is such that it can hold more water vapour then the water that is touching the air will turn into the gas water vapour and become part of the air. it will do this at any temperature which explains why you can hang clothes out to drying sub zero temperatures and they dry.
by evaporating the water when there is dry air and no humidity
evaporation
It can turn to gas / steam might be considered a type of gas
it turns into it by water,sunlight,air,tempeture and air
they turn into rain
yes. cool the air and the water will condense.
No? When you open water, the water molecules have contact with the air molecules. BUT! does the water turn into bubbles? I don't think so.
yes it does as the air mixed in with the water, evaporates into steam.
It takes a lot of energy to turn water into water vapor. The amount of energy that the water gains to turn into water vapor begins to be transferred into the surrounding air. If the air is willing to take on more energy the water vapor condenses quicker. This is why hot air will hold more water vapor than cold air.
Water gets converted to vapors.It travels from land to air.