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It's the water vapor in your breath, after it becomes liquid water. Warmer air is able to hold more water vapor than cooler air. When you breathe onto a cold surface, the air in your breath is cooled, and it can't then hold as much water vapor as it did when it was warm. So some of the vapor condenses out ... becomes water instead of vapor ... and the condensed water collects on the glass. Exactly the same process is responsible when you exhale into cold air and you "see your breath".
What you see is not steam. It's better to call it fog ... a cloud of tiny water droplets in the air. They form around anything cold, for the same reason that mist condenses and collects on a cold glass of soda or a cold mirror, and that you see your breath outside on a cold day. The cold object cools the air around it, whereupon the ability of the chilled air to hold water vapor is reduced, and some of the water vapor condenses out of the air, into the liquid state.
water travels faster in air
The difference between ocean energy and hydro energy is that ocean energy collects kinetic energy from waves in the ocean, while hydro energy collects it from water coming down from dams
The water falls faster and pushed the water down allowing air in before the water balances out and the trapped air form air bubbles
Water which collects as droplets on a cold surface when humid air is in contact with it.
The moisture in the warm air collects on the cold glass. When enough moisture collects, it forms beads of water that run down the side of the glass.
Water that collects as droplets on a cold surface when humid air is in contact with it.
Excessive air unsepararted in the supply lines collects at your fixtures. Contact your water supplier about the problem. If you are on a privte well, there are devices which remove this air entrainment. yepper...air in your pipes...Private well?
its just like when a bottel of watter sweats
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Water collects in large droplets in the bottom of fuel tanks when the water is in its free state.
This happens when the contents of the beaker are colder than the surrounding air. This causes water vapor in the warmer air to drop below its dew point and condense onto the outside of the beaker.
Precipitation happens when the air is 100% full of water and it doesnt want any more. Evaporation is what happens when water begins to dissolve in the air. If its raining that means the air is already full of water, so it wont dissolve any water that is on your skin because it's already full.
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water that collects as droplets on a cold surface when humid air is in contact with it.