I would assume trap it, and cool it back down
You can turn steam back into water by condensing it, condensation is a process which changes a gas into water.
Yes, steam can be turned back into water through a process called condensation. When steam cools down, its energy decreases, causing the water vapor molecules to come closer together, form droplets, and turn back into liquid water.
Yes water vapour or steam can be reverted back to water through the process known as condensing. If the steam is collected and cooled it will turn to water droplets that can be collected as water.
When steam loses heat energy, it undergoes a phase change and condenses into water. This process is called condensation. The steam molecules slow down and come closer together, forming liquid water droplets.
Steam is created when water boils at 100 degrees Celsius, 373 degrees Kelvin or 212 degrees Fahrenheit. This is at the normal, standard temperature and atmosphere pressure.
At normal pressure steam changes to liquid water at 212 degree F.
Capture it in a container with a lid and let set at room temperature. It will eventually turn back into a liquid if you have enough steam
It really depends on the temperature of the steam and temperature of the cold surface. 250 degree steam hitting a 50 or 60 degree surface will just turn back into water and droplets can be seen almost immediately. 1000+ degree steam hitting a frozen surface may cause a loud bang and eventually turn back into water.
yes it does as the air mixed in with the water, evaporates into steam.
we take water and put it in a cup and connect wires and we have some chemical that we pure it in water,that chemical is sodium.after we pure it we take salt and pure it in water until the light turn on,but it depend on how much salt we pure,then the light will turn on.
You have to cool it.
The steam generated in a nuclear reactor is used to turn a turbine, which in turn drives a generator to produce electricity. After passing through the turbine, the steam is condensed back into water in the condenser before being pumped back to the reactor as part of the cooling loop.