Water Vapour is removed from the kitchen by a ventilation system that is often installed over the stove which leads through the vents to the outside wall of the house, propelling the substance into the environment.
All you really need to do is reduce the temperature of the water vapor, preferably with a cold receptacle such as a glass or bowl. This happens naturally whenever you have a cold glass or soda start to "sweat," especially when humidity is high. Water vapor in the air hits the cold surface and condenses on the surface of the glass or can, forming water droplets.
What's happening here is the water vapor (higher energy) touches a cold surface (low energy). The cold surface absorbs some of the water vapor's thermal energy and the water molecules slow down into a liquid state.
To remove water vapour from the air, CONDENSATION is used. This means that the gas is put (back) into it's liquid state.
Rain
i forget
Water evaporates into water vapour, and water vapour condenses into water.
Global Warming. Water Vapour is considered a greenhouse gas.
No, water vapour is water. Nitrogen is around 72% of the air we breath but is not found in water, steam or vapour.
Water vapour depostion is water vapour transforming directly to ice without condensing first.
By using cobalt chloride paper. The acidity of the water would change the color of the paper due to the Ph balance.
condensation
evaporatiom
It's not !... It's a physical change. Chemically - whether water is frozen into ice, is liquid as water or a vapour (steam) - it's still the same substance.
yes it is
It is reversible . Water vapour can condense and become liquid. Evaporation and condensation are phases in the water cycle
No, this change is called condensation.
Evaporation
they turn from gas to liquid
No, evaporation is a change from liquid to gas (water vapour).
Physical change from liquid to vapour. The water remains chemically the same whether liquid or vapour.
Clouds are made up of water droplets of varying size, or ice crystals, not water vapour. Water vapour is the evaporite of clouds, and clouds often dissipate, so the water droplets making up the cloud change from visible water droplets to invisible water vapour. The "vapour trails" from aircraft engine exhausts are actually areas of cloud formation as water from burnt fuel condenses in cold air aloft.
To change from a gas into a liquid you must cool the substance. For example: water vapour to water.