yes. it do.
Molecules of carbon dioxide must absorb heat energy to change from solid to gas. Warm water contains more heat energy than cold water.
you breathe out water vapor
um...The best answer I can give to that is: eventually.If water is continually heated, it will eventually become a vapor/gas/steam, but if you have cold water and heat it up a bit, it will not become a gas. It takes a large amount of energy to convert water to steam.
Hot water has the energy(heat) to make the change go faster
Hot water. Higher temperature means more kinetic energy, and energy is needed to change phases from liquid to gas (evaporation.)
Steam is formed when the kinetice energy of the particles in boiling water increase and move around so much that they escape and change state. Mist is formed when the air is too cold to hold it's moisture.
Zinc does react with cold water - it just does so very slowly. Steam is water that is very hot and thus as with any chemical reaction, the heat gives the molecules more energy and so they react faster.
Zinc does react with cold water - it just does so very slowly. Steam is water that is very hot and thus as with any chemical reaction, the heat gives the molecules more energy and so they react faster.
Yes, the more substance you have, the slower the temperature change.
Water
You have to fill the can with steam and then seal it closed. when you then put the can in cold water the steam will condense into water and the can will be crushed by atmospheric pressure.
Water is formed as a liquid when steam meets a cold surface.
Molecules of carbon dioxide must absorb heat energy to change from solid to gas. Warm water contains more heat energy than cold water.
Hot water always steams, but when it is cold, the steam quickly converts to water droplets, and thus becomes visible. Pure steam is invisible.
By pumping cold water into a fissure and making use of the heated water. Either by pre-warming it before heating further, thus saving energy, or if the water turns to steam, using that to drive turbines.
Water is always H2O whether it is hot water, cold water, ice, or steam.
As steam cools it reverts back to fluid-- water.